CHAPTER 25 Ten Easy Ways to Estimate How Many Participants You Need 361
Chapter 25
Ten Easy Ways to
Estimate How Many
Participants You Need
S
ample-size calculations (also called power calculations) tend to frighten
researchers and send them running to the nearest statistician. But if you you
need a ballpark idea of how many participants are needed for a new research
project, you can use these ten quick and dirty rules of thumb.
Before you begin, take a look at Chapter 3 — especially the sections on hypothesis
testing and the power of a test. That way, you’ll refresh your memory about what
power and sample-size calculations are all about. For your study, you will need to
select the effect size of importance that you want to detect. An effect size could be
the difference of at least 10 mmHg in mean systolic blood-pressure lowering
between groups on two different hypertension drugs, or it could be having the
degree of correlation between two laboratory values of at least 0.7. Once you select
your effect size and compatible statistical test, look in this chapter for the rule for
the statistical test you selected to calculate the sample size.
The first six sections tell you how many participants you need to provide complete
data for you to analyze in order to have an 80 percent chance of getting a p value
IN THIS CHAPTER»
» Quickly estimating sample size for
several basic statistical tests»
» Adjusting for different levels of
power and α»
» Adjusting for unequal group sizes and
for attrition during the study