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Comment
. 2015 Apr;83(2):438-42; discussion 443-4.
doi: 10.1037/a0037220.

The sleeper effect: Artifact or phenomenon-A brief comment on Bell et al. (2013)

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Comment

The sleeper effect: Artifact or phenomenon-A brief comment on Bell et al. (2013)

Christoph Flückiger et al. J Consult Clin Psychol. 2015 Apr.

Abstract

Objective: Bell, Marcus, and Goodlad (2013) recently conducted a meta-analysis of randomized controlled additive trials and found that adding an additional component to an existing treatment vis-à-vis the existing treatment produced larger effect sizes on targeted outcomes at 6-months follow-up than at termination, an effect they labeled as a sleeper effect. One of the limitations with Bell et al.'s detection of the sleeper effect was that they did not conduct a statistical test of the size of the effect at follow-up versus termination.

Method: To statistically test if the differences of effect sizes between the additive conditions and the control conditions at follow-up differed from those at termination, we used a restricted maximum-likelihood random-effect model with known variances to conduct a multilevel longitudinal meta-analysis (k = 30).

Results: Although the small effects at termination detected by Bell et al. were replicated (ds = 0.17-0.23), none of the analyses of growth from termination to follow-up produced statistically significant effects (ds < 0.08; p > .20), and when asymmetry was considered using trim-and-fill procedure or the studies after 2000 were analyzed, magnitude of the sleeper effect was negligible (d = 0.00).

Conclusion: There is no empirical evidence to support the sleeper effect. (PsycINFO Database Record

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