Journal article
Confronting the Confounders: The Meaning, Detection, and Treatment of Confounders in Research
Abstract
When one variable is studied to try to explain another, the relationship between them may be biased by a third variable. The bias, known as "confounding," is common and must be minimized in research. This description is deceptively simple, though. Identifying confounding is complex but can be reduced to a stepped procedure. By way of examples, this article describes confounding and how to recognize it.
Authors
Rhodes AE; Lin E; Streiner DL
Journal
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 44, No. 2, pp. 175–179
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Publication Date
March 1999
DOI
10.1177/070674379904400209
ISSN
0706-7437