Limited by the option that a Gallery page provides with, I found that larger images can be posted and sent to a lightbox by being clicked on in blogs. So I would start my very first blog now!
Here are some data visualization samples supplementary to a published paper (the full-text paper can be obtained by clicking the title of this blog).
The original purpose of this publication was to see the difference in terms of changing diagnostic criteria of gambling disorder from DSM4 (5 of 10) to DSM5 (4 of 9). Here it goes the above plot to visualize the data of sensitivity, specificity and overall hit rates due to the change. In the paper, a significant increase in prevalence has also been found after lowering the threshold. In addition, the increase only seems to come from reducing the number of criteria being met, instead of eliminating the "Illegal Acts" criterion as a consideration - a detailed discussion can also be read in the published article. Therefore, there comes a question that whether the "Illegal Acts" criterion really matters to classifying a person to be a pathological gambler. Furthermore, since the initial draft also displayed the changes in prevalence in different gender, age, racial subgroups, there comes another question that whether the effect of changing diagnostic criteria occurs in between different subgroups.
To address these questions, two further analyses were conducted. One was Latent Class Analysis (LCA) to classify a sample into 2 groups, with and without gambling disorder, based on the overall 10 criteria. The results are summarized into a plot and shown in this blog. In the plot, every dot point represents the probability of a person's meeting a certain criterion given the person is being classified into a certain group (with or without gambling disorder). Obviously seen, no matter whether or not a person's been diagnosed as a patient with gambling disorder, the probabilities that he meets the "Illegal Acts" criterion are both low and very close. In another word, he has almost equal low probabilities to commit illegal acts, no matter whether he is a pathological gambler or not, which is saying illegal acts happen with equal likelihoods and NOT quite often in both pathological gambles and non-gamblers. This classification analysis (LCA) supports that eliminating the "Illegal Acts" criterion may not impact much in diagnoses.
The other analysis was logistic regression with an interactive term of different diagnostic criteria with subgroups (e.g. DSM*gender, where DSM=1 represents DSM4, and 0 is DSM5; gender=1 is female and 0 is male). The results were also shown in a plot. Although a change of criteria from DSM4 to DSM5 resulted in an increase in prevalence, the increase may be almost equal in all the sub-populations, seen from the interactive terms NOT being significant.
Finally, the two major questions raised from the original draft has been addressed. The reviewers of the paper have been satisfied, and it can be read in the journal of Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, a version in 2014. :)