It conducts three-level univariate meta-analysis with maximum likelihood estimation method. Mixed-effects meta-analysis can be conducted by including study characteristics as predictors. Equality constraints on the intercepts, regression coefficients and variance components on the level-2 and on the level-3 can be easily imposed by setting the same labels on the parameter estimates.
meta3(y, v, cluster, x, data, intercept.constraints = NULL,
      coef.constraints = NULL , RE2.constraints = NULL,
      RE2.lbound = 1e-10, RE3.constraints = NULL, RE3.lbound = 1e-10,
      intervals.type = c("z", "LB"), I2="I2q",
      R2=TRUE, model.name = "Meta analysis with ML",
      suppressWarnings = TRUE, silent = TRUE, run = TRUE, ...)
meta3X(y, v, cluster, x2, x3, av2, av3, data, intercept.constraints=NULL,
       coef.constraints=NULL, RE2.constraints=NULL, RE2.lbound=1e-10,
       RE3.constraints=NULL, RE3.lbound=1e-10, intervals.type=c("z", "LB"),
       R2=TRUE, model.name="Meta analysis with ML",
       suppressWarnings=TRUE, silent = TRUE, run = TRUE, ...)A vector of \(k\) studies of effect size.
A vector of \(k\) studies of sampling variance.
A vector of \(k\) characters or numbers indicating the clusters.
A predictor or a \(k\) x \(m\) matrix of level-2 and level-3 predictors where \(m\) is the number of predictors.
A predictor or a \(k\) x \(m\) matrix of level-2 predictors where \(m\) is the number of predictors.
A predictor or a \(k\) x \(m\) matrix of level-3 predictors where \(m\) is the number of predictors.
A predictor or a \(k\) x \(m\) matrix of level-2 auxiliary variables where \(m\) is the number of variables.
A predictor or a \(k\) x \(m\) matrix of level-3 auxiliary variables where \(m\) is the number of variables.
An optional data frame containing the variables in the model.
A \(1\) x \(1\) matrix
	specifying whether the intercept of the effect size is fixed or
	constrained. The format of this matrix follows
	as.mxMatrix. The intercept can be
	constrained with other parameters by using the same label.
A \(1\) x \(m\) matrix
	specifying how the level-2 and level-3 predictors predict the effect sizes. If the input
	is not a matrix, it is converted into a matrix by
	as.matrix(). The default
	is that all \(m\) predictors predict the effect size. The
	format of this matrix follows
	as.mxMatrix. The regression coefficients can be
	constrained equally by using the same labels.
A scalar or a \(1\) x \(1\) matrix
	specifying the variance components of the random effects. The default
	is that the variance components are free. The format of this matrix
	follows as.mxMatrix. Elements of the variance
	components can be constrained equally by using the same label.
A scalar or a \(1\) x \(1\) matrix of lower bound on the level-2 variance component of the random effects.
A scalar of a \(1\) x \(1\) matrix
	specifying the variance components of the random effects at
	level-3. The default is that the variance components are free. The format of this matrix
	follows as.mxMatrix. Elements of the variance
	components can be constrained equally by using the same label.
A scalar or a \(1\) x \(1\) matrix of lower bound on the level-3 variance component of the random effects.
Either z (default if missing) or
	LB. If it is z, it calculates the 95% Wald confidence
	intervals (CIs) based on the z statistic. If it is LB, it
	calculates the 95% likelihood-based CIs on the
	parameter estimates. Note that the z values and their
	associated p values are based on the z statistic. They are not
	related to the likelihood-based CIs.
Possible options are "I2q", "I2hm",
	"I2am" and "ICC". They represent the I2 calculated by using a
	typical within-study sampling variance from the Q statistic, the
	harmonic mean, the arithmetic mean of the within-study sampling
	variances, and the intra-class correlation. More than one options are possible. If intervals.type="LB", 95% confidence intervals on the heterogeneity indices will be constructed.
Logical. If TRUE and there are predictors, R2 is
	calculated.
A string for the model name in mxModel.
Logical. If TRUE, warnings are
	suppressed. It is passed to mxRun.
Logical. An argument to be passed to mxRun
Logical. If FALSE, only return the mx model without running the analysis.
Further arguments to be passed to
	mxRun
$$y_{ij} = \beta_0 + \mathbf{\beta'}*\mathbf{x}_{ij} + u_{(2)ij} + u_{(3)j} + e_{ij} $$ where \(y_{ij}\) is the effect size for the ith study in the jth cluster, \(\beta_0\) is the intercept, \(\mathbf{\beta}\) is the regression coefficients, \(\mathbf{x}_{ij}\) is a vector of predictors, \(u_{(2)ij} \sim N(0, \tau^2_2)\) and \(u_{(3)j} \sim N(0, \tau^2_3)\) are the level-2 and level-3 heterogeneity variances, respectively, and \(e_{ij} \sim N(0, v_{ij})\) is the conditional known sampling variance.
meta3() does not differentiate between level-2 or level-3
 variables in x since both variables are treated as a design
 matrix. When there are missing values in x, the data will be
 deleted. meta3X() treats the predictors x2 and x3
 as level-2 and level-3 variables. Thus, their means and covariance
 matrix will be estimated. Missing values in x2 and x3
 will be handled by (full information) maximum likelihood (FIML) in meta3X(). Moreover,
 auxiliary variables av2 at level-2 and av3 at level-3 may
 be included to improve the estimation. Although meta3X() is more
 flexible in handling missing covariates, it is more likely to encounter
 estimation problems.
Cheung, M. W.-L. (2014). Modeling dependent effect sizes with three-level meta-analyses: A structural equation modeling approach. Psychological Methods, 19, 211-229.
Enders, C. K. (2010). Applied missing data analysis. New York: Guilford Press.
Graham, J. (2003). Adding missing-data-relevant variables to FIML-based structural equation models. Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 10(1), 80-100.
Konstantopoulos, S. (2011). Fixed effects and variance components estimation in three-level meta-analysis. Research Synthesis Methods, 2, 61-76.