Robin Gomila
Princeton University
7 Papers
17 Citations
Robin Gomila is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social environment & Causal model. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Logistic or linear? Estimating causal effects of experimental treatments on binary outcomes using regression analysis.
TL;DR: The Neyman-Rubin causal model is reviewed, which is used to prove analytically that linear regression yields unbiased estimates of treatment effects on binary outcomes and, when interaction terms or fixed effects are included, linear regression is safer.
Missing Data in Experiments: Challenges and Solutions
Robin Gomila,Chelsey S. Clark +1 more
TL;DR: This tutorial provides concrete guidelines for handling each class ofMissing data, focusing on 2 methods that make realistic assumptions: inverse probability weighting (IPW) for mild instances of missingness, and double sampling and bounds for severe instances ofMissingness.
Does Product Placement Change Television Viewers' Social Behavior?
TL;DR: Action that could be taken during the immediate viewing session, like online searching, and those that were relatively more integrated into the telenovela storyline, specifically reducing cholesterol, were briefly affected, but not behaviors requiring sustained efforts, like opening a bank account or registering to vote.
A pragmatist philosophy of psychological science and its implications for replication
Ana P. Gantman,Robin Gomila,Joel E. Martinez,J. Nathan Matias,Elizabeth Levy Paluck,Jordan G. Starck,Sherry Wu,Nechumi Malovicki Yaffe +7 more
TL;DR: A pragmatist philosophy of psychological science offers to the direct replication debate concrete recommendations and novel benefits that are not discussed in Zwaan et al.
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The Social and Psychological Characteristics of Norm Deviants: A Field Study in a Small Cohesive University Campus
TL;DR: This paper conducted in-depth interviews of Princeton University upperclassmen who deviated from a historical and widely known Princeton norm: joining an eating club, a social group that undergraduates join at the end of their sophomore year.