What does fold change mean?

Saz94

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
If a research study describes something as having a 0.6 fold change. Does that mean it is higher or lower?
 
If a research study describes something as having a 0.6 fold change. Does that mean it is higher or lower?
Can you give an example of a paper that has said that?

As strategist says, I would assume it would mean that the thing being measured multiplied by 0.6, so it is 60% of what it was before - in other words it is lower. If someone weighs 100kg and their weight undergoes a 0.6 fold change, they would weigh 60kg.
 
I don't think this is at all clear. A 0.6 fold change could be a change to 60% or to 166% or even to 160% or 40% as far as I can see. Nobody normally says this. Unless it is some special technical term in a particular area it sounds like half-baked usage.
 
There is a Wikipedia page on it!

This suggest the most common use is as a multiplier, so if the number fold is less than one, it's a decrease:

''More ambiguous is fold decrease, where, for instance, a decrease of 50% between two measurements would generally be referred to a "half-fold change" rather than a "2-fold decrease''
 
Never having had any occasion to refer to a fold change in real life, for a long time I assumed it was 2^x, where x was the number of "folds," as in folding a piece of paper equally. So, three fold of something would be 8 times the original, because, in my mind, if you folded a piece of paper equally 3 times you produced 2^3 subdivisions, i.e. 8.


Sigh. Another beautiful hypothesis slayed by an ugly fact. :)
 
Start at zero, or baseline of whatever you are testing about.

"Fold" means x or multiplied by x.

So starting at zero, increase by 0.6x.
 
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