Making the Most of Statistical Analyses: Improving Interpretation and Presentation
Gary King, Michael Tomz, Jason Wittenberg. 2000.
"Making the Most of Statistical Analyses: Improving Interpretation and Presentation".
American Journal of Political Science, 44, Pp. 341–355.

Abstract
Social Scientists rarely take full advantage of the information available in their statistical results. As a consequence, they miss opportunities to present quantities that are of greatest substantive interest for their research and express the appropriate degree of certainty about these quantities. In this article, we offer an approach, built on the technique of statistical simulation, to extract the currently overlooked information from any statistical method and to interpret and present it in a reader-friendly manner. Using this technique requires some expertise, which we try to provide herein, but its application should make the results of quantitative articles more informative and transparent. To illustrate our recommendations, we replicate the results of several published works, showing in each case how the authors’ own conclusions can be expressed more sharply and informatively, and, without changing any data or statistical assumptions, how our approach reveals important new information about the research questions at hand. We also offer very easy-to-use Clarify software that implements our suggestions.
See Also
- [Dataset] Replication data for: Making the Most of Statistical Analyses: Improving Interpretation and Presentation
- [Paper] Calculating Standard Errors of Predicted Values Based on Nonlinear Functional Forms (1991)
- [Software] CLARIFY: Software for Interpreting and Presenting Statistical Results (2003)
- [Paper] Google Flu Trends Still Appears Sick: An Evaluation of the 2013‐2014 Flu Season (2014)
- [Paper] How Robust Standard Errors Expose Methodological Problems They Do Not Fix, and What to Do About It (2015)
- [Paper] The Parable of Google Flu: Traps in Big Data Analysis (2014)
- [Paper] Toward A Common Framework for Statistical Analysis and Development (2008)
- [Paper] Twitter: Big Data Opportunities—Response (2014)