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The dodo bird verdict is alive and well--mostly.
484
Citations
66
References
2002
Year
Different PsychotherapiesMeta-analysisPsychiatryEffect SizeMedicineActive TreatmentsPsychologyAvian EvolutionRandomized Controlled TrialTreatment EffectSocial SciencesRehabilitationDodo Bird VerdictWildlife BiologyPsychotherapyEvidence-based TherapyPsychopathology
We examined 17 meta-analyses of comparisons of active treatments with each other, in contrast to the more usual comparisons of active treatments with controls. These meta-analyses yielded a mean uncorrected absolute effect size for Cohen's d of .20, which is small and non-significant (an equivalent Pearson's r would be. 10). The smallness of this effect size confirms Rosenzweig's supposition in 1936 about the likely results of such comparisons. In the present sample, when such differences were corrected for the therapeutic allegiance of the researchers involved in comparing the different psychotherapies, these differences tend to become even further reduced in size and significance, as shown previously by Luborsky, Diguer, Seligman, et al. (1999).
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