• J. Investig. Med. · Oct 2016

    Review

    P values: from suggestion to superstition.

    • John Concato and John A Hartigan.
    • Clinical Epidemiology Research Center, Cooperative Studies Program, Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut, USA Department of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
    • J. Investig. Med. 2016 Oct 1; 64 (7): 116611711166-71.

    AbstractA threshold probability value of 'p≤0.05' is commonly used in clinical investigations to indicate statistical significance. To allow clinicians to better understand evidence generated by research studies, this review defines the p value, summarizes the historical origins of the p value approach to hypothesis testing, describes various applications of p≤0.05 in the context of clinical research and discusses the emergence of p≤5×10(-8) and other values as thresholds for genomic statistical analyses. Corresponding issues include a conceptual approach of evaluating whether data do not conform to a null hypothesis (ie, no exposure-outcome association). Importantly, and in the historical context of when p≤0.05 was first proposed, the 1-in-20 chance of a false-positive inference (ie, falsely concluding the existence of an exposure-outcome association) was offered only as a suggestion. In current usage, however, p≤0.05 is often misunderstood as a rigid threshold, sometimes with a misguided 'win' (p≤0.05) or 'lose' (p>0.05) approach. Also, in contemporary genomic studies, a threshold of p≤10(-8) has been endorsed as a boundary for statistical significance when analyzing numerous genetic comparisons for each participant. A value of p≤0.05, or other thresholds, should not be employed reflexively to determine whether a clinical research investigation is trustworthy from a scientific perspective. Rather, and in parallel with conceptual issues of validity and generalizability, quantitative results should be interpreted using a combined assessment of strength of association, p values, CIs, and sample size.Copyright © 2016 American Federation for Medical Research.

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