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Infant and Child Development - 2023 - Woods - Best practices for addressing missing data through multiple imputation.pdf (2.92 MB)

Best practices for addressing missing data through multiple imputation

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posted on 2023-07-13, 11:23 authored by Adrienne D Woods, Daria Gerasimova, Ben Van Dusen, Jayson Nissen, Sierra Bainter, Alex Uzdavines, Pamela E Davis‐Kean, Max Halvorson, Kevin M King, Jessica AR Logan, Menglin Xu, Martin R Vasilev, James M Clay, David Moreau, Keven Joyal‐Desmarais, Rick A Cruz, Denver MY Brown, Kathleen Schmidt, Mahmoud M Elsherif

 A common challenge in developmental research is the amount of incomplete and missing data that occurs from respondents failing to complete tasks or questionnaires, as well as from disengaging from the study (i.e., attrition). This missingness can lead to biases in parameter estimates and, hence, in the interpretation of findings. These biases can be addressed through statistical techniques that adjust for missing data, such as multiple imputation. Although multiple imputation is highly effective, it has not been widely adopted by developmental scientists given barriers such as lack of training or misconceptions about imputation methods. Utilizing default methods within statistical software programs like listwise deletion is common but may introduce additional bias. This manuscript is intended to provide practical guidelines for developmental researchers to follow when examining their data for missingness, making decisions about how to handle that missingness and reporting the extent of missing data biases and specific multiple imputation procedures in publications. 

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Citation

Woods, A. D., Gerasimova, D., Van Dusen, B., Nissen, J., Bainter, S., Uzdavines, A., Davis-Kean, P. E., Halvorson, M., King, K. M., Logan, J. A. R., Xu, M., Vasilev, M. R., Clay, J. M., Moreau, D., Joyal-Desmarais, K., Cruz, R. A., Brown, D. M. Y., Schmidt, K., & Elsherif, M. M. (2023). Best practices for addressing missing data through multiple imputation. Infant and Child Development, e2407

Author affiliation

School of Psychology and Vision Sciences, University of Leicester

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

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Infant and Child Development

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1522-7227

eissn

1522-7219

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-07-13

Language

en

Deposit date

28/02/2023

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