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Small sample sizes reduce the replicability of task-based fMRI studies

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Despite a growing body of research suggesting that task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies often suffer from a lack of statistical power due to too-small samples, the proliferation of… Click to show full abstract

Despite a growing body of research suggesting that task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies often suffer from a lack of statistical power due to too-small samples, the proliferation of such underpowered studies continues unabated. Using large independent samples across eleven tasks, we demonstrate the impact of sample size on replicability, assessed at different levels of analysis relevant to fMRI researchers. We find that the degree of replicability for typical sample sizes is modest and that sample sizes much larger than typical (e.g., N = 100) produce results that fall well short of perfectly replicable. Thus, our results join the existing line of work advocating for larger sample sizes. Moreover, because we test sample sizes over a fairly large range and use intuitive metrics of replicability, our hope is that our results are more understandable and convincing to researchers who may have found previous results advocating for larger samples inaccessible.Benjamin Turner et al. report an assessment of replicability of task-based fMRI studies as a function of sample size. They find that the degree of replicability for typical samples sizes reported in the literature is modest and advocate for standards requiring larger sample sizes, potentially in excess of N = 100.

Keywords: replicability; task based; sample sizes; fmri studies

Journal Title: Communications Biology
Year Published: 2018

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