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I am having some difficulties interpreting the results of an analysis perfomed using lme. I conducted an experiment where the subjects had to estimate the time elapsed in a task involving a spatial measure (e.g. subjects watched a video game where a car travels a certain distance). My goal is to determine if there is a linear relation between perceived time and the space traveled by the car. Subject underwent 2 different conditions (e.g. the car was traveling two distances), and each condition was repeated twice. Therefore, given the nature of the experimental design involving repeated measures, I cannot use a simple linear model but I have to use a mixed effects linear model with a random intercept for subject.

I use the R language, and I adopted this formula to solve my problem

library(nlme)
summary(lme(Time ~ Distance, data = my_Table, random = ~1 | Subject))

The output that I get is:

Linear mixed-effects model fit by REML
 Data: my_Table 
      AIC      BIC    logLik
  608.315 618.4454 -300.1575

Random effects:
 Formula: ~1 | Subject
        (Intercept) Residual
StdDev:    2.964139 4.919044

Fixed effects: Time ~ Distance
                                          Value Std.Error DF  t-value p-value
(Intercept)                            5.518714 0.8212930 64 6.719543  0.0000
 Distance                              0.013092 0.0053225 64 2.459718  0.0166
 Correlation: 
                                       (Intr)
 Distance                              -0.415

Standardized Within-Group Residuals:
       Min         Q1        Med         Q3        Max 
-1.2904862 -0.4302117 -0.2593047  0.2081889  5.0914269 

Number of Observations: 95
Number of Groups: 30 

Now, what is this output telling me? As far as I understand from studying the literature that I found online (I am not a statistician...), if I am rght these results are telling me that there is a linear relation between time and space, since b = 0.013092 and p-value is significant.

Now, if the p-value was not significant, this would have meant that there is no linear relation between time and space?

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2 Answers 2

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I will assume that the modeling assumptions you made are correct and you ran the program properly since your question only addresses the interpretation of the output. In a linear model involving a single covariate, you can test for a linear association either by testing whether the slope coefficient is 0 or not or by testing that the Pearson correlation between the response and the covariate is 0 or not.

You tested the slope coefficient and got a small slope that is positive. The test for that coefficient being 0 had a p-value of 0.0166. If that p-value is below your desired significance level, you would conclude that there is some relationship between the covariate and response. Using a traditional significance level of 0.05, you would then reject the null hypothesis that there is no relationship. However, the slope appears to be small and the intercept is the dominant term in the model. Saying that the correlation is not zero is not the same as saying that the correlation is strong. You should look at say a 95% confidence interval for the correlation and think about what its upper bound is telling. If a strong correlation to you is, say, around 0.6 and the upper bound is, say, 0.1, this suggests that the correlation though probably greater than 0 is not strong.

Addressing your second question, if the p-value is not below your significance level, you don't conclude anything. What you know is that the data did not supply enough evidence that the correlation is different from 0. This could be because it is 0 or very close to 0. But more importantly, it could be that the sample size is not large enough to reach the conclusion that it is different from 0. Now if you instead address the issue of strong correlation and 0.6 is your definition of strong then it may be the case that the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval for the Pearson correlation is below (perhaps far below) 0.6 and you can still claim at least that the correlation is not strong. Understand that testing for strong correlation is different than testing for non-zero correlation and the p-value in your output address the latter test in my previous sentence and not the former.

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  • $\begingroup$ Many many thanks dear Michael, your answer really enligthened me. $\endgroup$
    – L_T
    Sep 22, 2012 at 15:20
  • $\begingroup$ what does the random effect tell us? If the StdDev is smaller than the residual-stdev, there should be no random effect, right? $\endgroup$
    – Jens
    May 13, 2013 at 8:49
  • $\begingroup$ one more thing: is ist possible to suppress the correlation table for the fixed effects in the output? this is not an issue here, but I did not find a solution for that $\endgroup$
    – Jens
    May 13, 2013 at 8:52
  • $\begingroup$ @Michael Chemick Do you know how to explain the most mysterious part of the output: how the DF column is calculated? $\endgroup$
    – Zhanxiong
    Dec 9, 2017 at 21:53
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A further clarification. Your question asks whether this test provides evidence of a linear relation. In fact, linearity is an assumption of the model - the model does not test for linearity. Therefore, it is possible that the relationship between variables is, in fact, non-linear. In this case, the model could either show an effect or fail to show the effect.

So, going back to your question - taking into account what has already been posted here - the low p-value (high t-value) provides evidence of a relationship between your variables, but does not say anything about whether the relationship is linear or not (because this was assumed, rather than explicitly tested).

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