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Using Statistics in Research Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.

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Presentation on theme: "Using Statistics in Research Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Using Statistics in Research Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology

2 Announcements Final Drafts of class experiment due in labs this week Don’t forget to look over the grading checklist in the PIP packet

3 From last time Real world (‘truth’) H 0 is correct H 0 is wrong Experimenter’s conclusions Reject H 0 Fail to Reject H 0 Type I error Type II error  Example Experiment:  Group A - gets treatment to improve memory  Group B - gets no treatment (control)  After treatment period test both groups for memory  Results:  Group A’s average memory score is 80%  Group B’s is 76%  Is the 4% difference a “real” difference (statistically significant) or is it just sampling error?  Example Experiment:  Group A - gets treatment to improve memory  Group B - gets no treatment (control)  After treatment period test both groups for memory  Results:  Group A’s average memory score is 80%  Group B’s is 76%  Is the 4% difference a “real” difference (statistically significant) or is it just sampling error? XAXA XBXB 76%80%

4 “Generic” statistical test Tests the question: Are there differences between groups due to a treatment? H 0 is true (no treatment effect) One population Two samples Real world (‘truth’) H 0 is correct H 0 is wrong Experimenter’s conclusions Reject H 0 Fail to Reject H 0 Type I error Type II error XAXA XBXB 76%80% Two possibilities in the “real world”

5 “Generic” statistical test Tests the question: Are there differences between groups due to a treatment? Two possibilities in the “real world” XAXA XBXB XAXA XBXB H 0 is true (no treatment effect) H 0 is false (is a treatment effect) Two populations Two samples Real world (‘truth’) H 0 is correct H 0 is wrong Experimenter’s conclusions Reject H 0 Fail to Reject H 0 Type I error Type II error 76%80% 76%80%

6 “Generic” statistical test XBXB XAXA Why might the samples be different? (What is the source of the variability between groups)? ER: Random sampling error ID: Individual differences (if between subjects factor) TR: The effect of a treatment

7 “Generic” statistical test The generic test statistic - is a ratio of sources of variability Observed difference Difference from chance = TR + ID + ER ID + ER = Computed test statistic XBXB XAXA ER: Random sampling error ID: Individual differences (if between subjects factor) TR: The effect of a treatment

8 Sampling error The distribution of sample means is a distribution of all possible sample means of a particular sample size that can be drawn from the population XAXA XBXB XCXC XDXD Population Samples of size = n Distribution of sample means Avg. Sampling error “chance”

9 “Generic” statistical test The generic test statistic distribution To reject the H 0, you want a computed test statistics that is large reflecting a large Treatment Effect (TR) What’s large enough? The alpha level gives us the decision criterion Distribution of the test statistic  -level determines where these boundaries go Distribution of sample means Test statistic TR + ID + ER ID + ER

10 “Generic” statistical test Distribution of the test statistic Reject H 0 Fail to reject H 0 The generic test statistic distribution To reject the H 0, you want a computed test statistics that is large reflecting a large Treatment Effect (TR) What’s large enough? The alpha level gives us the decision criterion

11 “Generic” statistical test Things that affect the computed test statistic Size of the treatment effect The bigger the effect, the bigger the computed test statistic Difference expected by chance (sample error) Sample size Variability in the population

12 Significance “A statistically significant difference” means: the researcher is concluding that there is a difference above and beyond chance with the probability of making a type I error at 5% (assuming an alpha level = 0.05) Note “statistical significance” is not the same thing as theoretical significance. Only means that there is a statistical difference Doesn’t mean that it is an important difference

13 Non-Significance Failing to reject the null hypothesis Generally, not interested in “accepting the null hypothesis” (remember we can’t prove things only disprove them) Usually check to see if you made a Type II error (failed to detect a difference that is really there) Check the statistical power of your test Sample size is too small Effects that you’re looking for are really small Check your controls, maybe too much variability

14 Some inferential statistical tests 1 factor with two groups T-tests Between groups: 2-independent samples Within groups: Repeated measures samples (matched, related) 1 factor with more than two groups Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) (either between groups or repeated measures) Multi-factorial Factorial ANOVA

15 T-test Design 2 separate experimental conditions Degrees of freedom Based on the size of the sample and the kind of t-test Formula: T = X 1 - X 2 Diff by chance Based on sample error Observed difference Computation differs for between and within t-tests

16 T-test Reporting your results The observed difference between conditions Kind of t-test Computed T-statistic Degrees of freedom for the test The “p-value” of the test “The mean of the treatment group was 12 points higher than the control group. An independent samples t-test yielded a significant difference, t(24) = 5.67, p < 0.05.” “The mean score of the post-test was 12 points higher than the pre- test. A repeated measures t-test demonstrated that this difference was significant significant, t(12) = 5.67, p < 0.05.”

17 Analysis of Variance Designs More than two groups 1 Factor ANOVA, Factorial ANOVA Both Within and Between Groups Factors Test statistic is an F-ratio Degrees of freedom Several to keep track of The number of them depends on the design XBXB XAXA XCXC

18 Analysis of Variance More than two groups Now we can’t just compute a simple difference score since there are more than one difference So we use variance instead of simply the difference Variance is essentially an average difference Observed variance Variance from chance F-ratio = XBXB XAXA XCXC

19 1 factor ANOVA 1 Factor, with more than two levels Now we can’t just compute a simple difference score since there are more than one difference A - B, B - C, & A - C XBXB XAXA XCXC

20 1 factor ANOVA Null hypothesis: H 0 : all the groups are equal X A = X B = X C Alternative hypotheses H A : not all the groups are equal X A ≠ X B ≠ X C X A ≠ X B = X C X A = X B ≠ X C X A = X C ≠ X B The ANOVA tests this one!! Do further tests to pick between these XBXB XAXA XCXC

21 1 factor ANOVA Planned contrasts and post-hoc tests: - Further tests used to rule out the different Alternative hypotheses X A ≠ X B ≠ X C X A ≠ X B = X C X A = X B ≠ X C X A = X C ≠ X B Test 1: A ≠ B Test 2: A ≠ C Test 3: B = C

22 Reporting your results The observed differences Kind of test Computed F-ratio Degrees of freedom for the test The “p-value” of the test Any post-hoc or planned comparison results “The mean score of Group A was 12, Group B was 25, and Group C was 27. A 1-way ANOVA was conducted and the results yielded a significant difference, F(2,25) = 5.67, p < 0.05. Post hoc tests revealed that the differences between groups A and B and A and C were statistically reliable (respectively t(1) = 5.67, p < 0.05 & t(1) = 6.02, p <0.05). Groups B and C did not differ significantly from one another” 1 factor ANOVA

23 Factorial ANOVAs We covered much of this in our experimental design lecture More than one factor Factors may be within or between Overall design may be entirely within, entirely between, or mixed Many F-ratios may be computed An F-ratio is computed to test the main effect of each factor An F-ratio is computed to test each of the potential interactions between the factors

24 Factorial ANOVAs Reporting your results The observed differences Because there may be a lot of these, may present them in a table instead of directly in the text Kind of design e.g. “2 x 2 completely between factorial design” Computed F-ratios May see separate paragraphs for each factor, and for interactions Degrees of freedom for the test Each F-ratio will have its own set of df’s The “p-value” of the test May want to just say “all tests were tested with an alpha level of 0.05” Any post-hoc or planned comparison results Typically only the theoretically interesting comparisons are presented


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