Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Downstream analyses: Common approaches and use cases #60

Open
wendtke opened this issue Jul 18, 2019 · 5 comments
Open

Downstream analyses: Common approaches and use cases #60

wendtke opened this issue Jul 18, 2019 · 5 comments
Assignees
Labels
good first issue Good for newcomers question Further information is requested
Projects

Comments

@wendtke
Copy link
Owner

wendtke commented Jul 18, 2019

Right now as I'm trying to figure out the best approach, I need to know some common characteristics in downstream analyses. Some detailed use cases will help. For example, what are some frequently used statistical models? Are modeling usually done for each and every subject, or across some kind of summation of a group?

Originally posted by @iqis in #58 (comment)

@wendtke wendtke added the question Further information is requested label Jul 18, 2019
@wendtke
Copy link
Owner Author

wendtke commented Jul 18, 2019

@iqis

Examples:

  • repeated measures ANOVA (there are limitations with this approach; see Vasey & Thayer, 1987)
  • latent growth curve modeling
  • time series analyses such as multilevel autoregressive modeling
  • general multilevel modeling approaches

Approaches differ based on individual vs. dyadic (two people) data and number of data streams (e.g., combining HRV/RSA and EDA for index of autonomic coordination; see here for example). I focus on dyadic physiological processes. See here and here.

@MalloryJfeldman and I can add more examples and papers to the Google Drive and will write detailed use cases for visualization #34 and analysis #60.

@iqis
Copy link
Contributor

iqis commented Jul 19, 2019

Thanks, I'm starting to finally get a grasp on what on earth you guys are really doing. I took a glance at the papers and found Helm very interesting. I also wonder how much does what is called psychophysiology are generalizeable to ... well.. regular physiology?

@wendtke
Copy link
Owner Author

wendtke commented Jul 19, 2019

Yes, definitely. I think of psyphophysiology as the nesting of physiological processes within a psychological framework of analysis; we try to make inferences about individuals' and dyads' psychological functioning based on patterns of physiological responses.

@MalloryJfeldman
Copy link

A lot of the physio we do utilizes multilevel modeling. More recently we've been interested in dynamical systems modeling, structural equations, and unsupervised clustering techniques though I only have experience with the latter. I'll keep thinking on this!

@wendtke wendtke added the good first issue Good for newcomers label Jul 20, 2019
@wendtke
Copy link
Owner Author

wendtke commented Jul 22, 2019

Is modeling usually done for each and every subject, or across some kind of summation of a group?

Originally posted by @iqis in #58 (comment)

Both/either. Depends on the analytic approach.

@wendtke wendtke added this to To do in psyphr Jul 28, 2019
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
good first issue Good for newcomers question Further information is requested
Projects
psyphr
  
To do
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants