Chapter 1 Displaying the Order in a Group of Numbers and… Intro to SPSS (Activity 1) Thurs. Aug 22, 2013
The Two Branches of Statistical Methods Descriptive statistics – Summarize/organize Inferential statistics – Draw conclusions/make inferences
Basic Concepts Variable – A condition or characteristic that can have different values –Example? Value – A possible number or category that a score can have –Example? Score – A particular person’s value on a variable
Levels of Measurement Numeric (quantitative) variable – Equal-interval variables Example? – Rank-order (ordinal) variables Example? Nominal (categorical) variables – Example?
Frequency Tables Provide a listing of individuals having each of the different values for a particular variable. e.g., stress ratings of 151 students: 4,7,7,7,8,8,7,8,9,4,7,3,6,9,10,5,7,10,6,8,7,8,7,8,7,4,5,10,10,0,9,8,3,7,9,7,9,5,8,5,0,4,6,6,7,5,3,2,8,5,10,9,10,6,4,8,8,8,4,8,7,3,8,8,8,8,7,9,7,5,6,3,4,8,7,5,7,3,3,6,5,7,5,7,8,8,7,10,5,4,3,7,6,3,9, 7,8,5,7,9,9,3,1,8,6,6,4,8,5,10,4,8,10,5,5,4,9,4,7,7,7,6,6,4,4,4,9, 7,10,4,7,5,10,7,9,2,7,5,9,10,3,7,2,5,9,8,10,10,6,8,3
Steps for Making a Frequency Table Make a list down the page of each possible value, from highest to lowest Go one by one through the scores, making a mark for each next to its value on the list Make a table showing how many times each value on your list is used Figure the percentage of scores for each value
A Frequency Table : Grouped Frequency Table: You decide how many intervals to use, but make them equal intervals!
Frequency Graphs Histogram Used for continuous data, so bars can touch Bar graph used for categorical data – bars don’t touch.
Frequency Graphs Frequency polygon Like a histogram, but use points instead of bars May indicate change over time better
Shapes of Frequency Distributions Unimodal, bimodal, and rectangular
Shapes of Frequency Distributions Symmetrical and skewed distributions Which direction is the tail pointing? Pos/Neg?
Shapes of Frequency Distributions Normal and kurtotic distributions Indicates variability of the scores – clustered or spread out?
SPSS Example: Data Entry & Frequencies 1. Open SPSS, choose “Type in Data” when starting a new data file. – Notice the spreadsheet has 2 tabs at the bottom: “data view” and “variable view”. – Data view = where you enter your data and use the menus to analyze data – Variable view = where you provide SPSS info about your variables
SPSS Example: Data Entry & Frequencies 2. Start by clicking the “variable view” tab and we’ll give names to our variables Things to note: Variable names have a max of 8 characters; don’t use spaces or hyphens (underscores are OK) “labels” column - give more descriptive labels to variables “type” column – default is numeric, change to ‘string’ if you use those variables
SPSS Example: Data Entry & Frequencies “values” column – for numeric variables, can provide names for each value 3. Once variables are named, etc., click tab to go back to ‘data view’ and enter data. 4. What to do w/Missing data?
SPSS Example: Data Entry & Frequencies Once data is entered, begin analyses by using menus at top of ‘data view’ window. 5. For frequency tables, (Analyze Descriptives Frequencies) then click on arrow to get variables you want into ‘variable’ list. When analysis is done, SPSS takes you to a new ‘output’ window. Use the window buttons at bottom to move back & forth between output and data. Note – in tables, difference between “Percent” and “Valid Percent” depends on missing data – – Use “Valid Percentage” to report %s & ignore missing data – Use “Percentage” to include all data, even if missing