Exposing omitted moderators: Explaining why effect sizes differ in the social sciences

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Mar 19;121(12):e2306281121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2306281121. Epub 2024 Mar 11.

Abstract

Policymakers increasingly rely on behavioral science in response to global challenges, such as climate change or global health crises. But applications of behavioral science face an important problem: Interventions often exert substantially different effects across contexts and individuals. We examine this heterogeneity for different paradigms that underlie many behavioral interventions. We study the paradigms in a series of five preregistered studies across one in-person and 10 online panels, with over 11,000 respondents in total. We find substantial heterogeneity across settings and paradigms, apply techniques for modeling the heterogeneity, and introduce a framework that measures typically omitted moderators. The framework's factors (Fluid Intelligence, Attentiveness, Crystallized Intelligence, and Experience) affect the effectiveness of many text-based interventions, producing different observed effect sizes and explaining variations across samples. Moderators are associated with effect sizes through two paths, with the intensity of the manipulation and with the effect of the manipulation directly. Our results motivate observing these moderators and provide a theoretical and empirical framework for understanding and predicting varying effect sizes in the social sciences.

Keywords: choice architecture; moderators; online data collection.

MeSH terms

  • Attention
  • Behavioral Sciences*
  • Humans
  • Social Sciences*