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The indirect effect is omitted variable bias. A cautionary note on the theoretical interpretation of products-of-coefficients in mediation analyses

Lennert Coenen

2022European Journal of Communication13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper intends to remind communication scientists that the indirect effect as estimated in mediation analyses is a statistical synonym for omitted variable bias (i.e. confounding or suppression). This simple fact questions the interpretability of statistically significant ‘indirect effects’ when using observational data: in social reality, all variables correlate with each other to some extent – the so-called ‘crud factor’ – which means that omitted variable bias and ‘indirect effects’ at the population level are virtually guaranteed regardless of the actual variables involved in the statistical mediation model. As a result, there can be no inferential link between the observation of a significant indirect effect and a theoretical claim of mediation. Through this argument, the paper hopes to add to the existing warnings on mediation analyses and cultivate a more critical interpretation of ‘indirect effects’ in communication science.

Topics & Concepts

MediationInterpretabilityOmitted-variable biasVariable (mathematics)Argument (complex analysis)EconometricsInterpretation (philosophy)ConfoundingPsychologyVariablesSocial psychologyStatisticsPositive economicsEconomicsMathematicsSociologyComputer scienceSocial scienceMachine learningBiochemistryChemistryProgramming languageMathematical analysisOpinion Dynamics and Social InfluenceSocial Media and PoliticsSocial and Intergroup Psychology
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