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Statistical Significance What is Statistical Significance? How Do We Know Whether a Result is Statistically Significant? How Do We Know Whether a Result.

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Presentation on theme: "Statistical Significance What is Statistical Significance? How Do We Know Whether a Result is Statistically Significant? How Do We Know Whether a Result."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Statistical Significance What is Statistical Significance? How Do We Know Whether a Result is Statistically Significant? How Do We Know Whether a Result is Statistically Significant? Significance as a Probability Game What is a Sampling Distribution?

3 What is Statistical Significance? Statistical significance is a technical decision made using inferential statistics. We say that a result is statistically significant if our inferential statistic indicates that we reject the Null Hypothesis.

4 How Do We Know Whether a Result is Statistically Significant? Test the Null Hypothesis using an inferential statistic. The result of the statistical test indicates a probability. If the probability is lower than our criterion significance level, we reject the Null, meaning that the result is significant.

5 Determining Significance The Null Hypothesis (H o ) states that there is no difference, effect, or correlation in the population H o is assumed to be true unless there is enough evidence to reject it. Burden of proof on the researcher The researcher’s hypothesis (Alternative Hypothesis, H A ) is only tested indirectly

6 Determining Significance How strong does the evidence have to be to reject the Null? The researcher must set a criterion. This is the significance level, or alpha (  ). The conventional alpha level is.05. We are conservative about rejecting Ho.

7 Determining Significance When testing for significance, we calculate a test statistic. The test statistic allows us to determine the probability of obtaining our results under the assumption that H o is true. If this probability is small enough, then H o is probably not true, so we should reject it.

8 Determining Significance If the probability is lower than our significance level, we Reject Ho (p <.05). If the probability is not lower than our significance level, we Fail to Reject Ho (p >.05). Ho is never “accepted” or “proven.”

9 Significance as a Probability Game There are four possible outcomes in significance test, based on two dimensions: – The researcher’s decision about Ho. – Whether Ho is really true or false. The probability of each outcome can be determined.

10 Ho true Ho false TRUE STATE OF THE WORLD DECISION RejectHo Fail to Reject Ho Type I error  Correct 1 -  Correct 1 -  (power) Type II error  (beta)

11 Statistics as a Probability Game  is set by the researcher 1-  depends on 

12 Statistics as a Probability Game Power is increased by: – higher alpha – larger sample – lower variability – larger effect size Anything that increases power decreases beta

13 What is a Sampling Distribution? A hypothetical frequency distribution of sample statistics from an infinite number of samples. Allows us to make probability judgments about the likelihood of obtaining a particular result.

14 Imagining a Sampling Distribution 1.Take a random sample. 2.Compute the mean. 3.Take another random sample and compute the mean. 4.Do this an infinite number of times. 5.Put the resulting sample means in a frequency distribution.

15 Nice Things About Sampling Distributions 1. The mean is the hypothesized population mean. 2. The standard deviation can be calculated (standard error). 3. The shape is usually normal.

16 Central Limits Theorem The sampling distribution becomes more normal as the sample size increases. With a sample size of 30 or more, the sampling distribution becomes very close to exactly normal.

17 Why These Are “Nice” Things If you know the  and  of a distribution, you can compute z-scores. In a normal distribution, you can look up the proportion of scores above or below any z score. For any sample mean in the sampling distribution, we can find the proportion of sample means above or below it.

18 Making Inferences There are three distributions used when we make an inference: – sample distribution – sampling distribution – population distribution The sampling distribution is the “bridge” from the sample to the population.


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