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The existence of several accessible sources has led to a proliferation of mediation models in the applied research literature. Most of these sources assume endogenous variables (e.g., M, and Y) have normally distributed residuals, precluding models of binary and/or count data. Although a growing body of literature has expanded mediation models to include more diverse data types, the nonlinearity of these models presents a substantial hurdle to their implementation and interpretation. The present study extends the existing literature (e.g., Hayes Stolzenberg, 1980) to propose conditional indirect effects as a useful tool for understanding mediation models that include paths estimated using the Generalized Linear Model (e.g., logistic regression, Poisson regression). We briefly review the relevant literature, culminating in a discussion of conditional indirect effects and their importance when examining nonlinear associations. We present a simple extension of the equations presented by Hayes and Preacher (2010) and provide an applied example of the technique.
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G. John Geldhof
Oregon State University
Katherine P. Anthony
Dexcom (United States)
James P. Selig
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
International Journal of Behavioral Development
Oregon State University
Intel (United States)
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
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Geldhof et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a057ddb433f4535d70afdaf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0165025417727876