Skip to main content

Table 2 Model selection for PRLT performance in the two-groups sample

From: Decision-making inflexibility in a reversal learning task is associated with severity of problem gambling symptoms but not with a diagnosis of substance use disorder

Model

Fixed factors

df

AIC

χ2

p

Sat. (0.a)

Group, Phase, Log-trial, 2-way interactions, 3-way interaction

19

10,422

  

1

Saturated minus 3-way interaction

16

10,419

2.418

0.490

(1 ≥ 0.a)

2.1

Model 1 minus Group × Log-trial

15

10,418

1.418

0.227

(2.1 ≥ 1)

2.2b

Model 1 minus Phase × Log-trial

13

10,432

18.978

 < 0.001

(1 > 2.2)

2.3

Model 1 minus Phase × Group

13

10,418

4.973

0.174

(2.3 ≥ 1)

2.4

Model 1 minus Group × Log-trial and Phase × Group

12

10,417

  

3a

Model 2.4 minus Group

11

10,416

0.592

0.459

(3 ≥ 2.4)

  1. Significant p values are in italics
  2. aBest fitting model
  3. bAlmost singular fit (given the risk of overfitting, parameters will be estimated both for Model 1 and Model 3) (Although singular models are statistically well defined, singular fits may correspond to overfitted models with low power, and inferential procedures such as likelihood ratio tests may be inappropriate. In our case, singularity is due to the inclusion of Log-trial as a random slope in the model. Although it is theoretically sensible to assume that there are random individual differences in learning rates across participants, random slopes are not necessary to capture statistical dependency between repeated measures and thus to properly estimate within-participant effects. In view of that, and for the sake of consistency, alternative analyses without random slopes in the models are provided in the Additional file)
  4. Sat Saturated