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SPSS Homework Practice The Neuroticism Measure = 23.32 S = 6.24 n = 54 How many people likely have a neuroticism score between 29 and 34?

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Presentation on theme: "SPSS Homework Practice The Neuroticism Measure = 23.32 S = 6.24 n = 54 How many people likely have a neuroticism score between 29 and 34?"— Presentation transcript:

1

2 SPSS Homework

3 Practice The Neuroticism Measure = 23.32 S = 6.24 n = 54 How many people likely have a neuroticism score between 29 and 34?

4 Practice (29-23.32) /6.24 =.91 area =.3186 ( 34-23.32)/6.26 = 1.71 area =.4564.4564-.3186 =.1378.1378*54 = 7.44 or 7 people

5 Practice On the next test I will give an A to the top 5 percent of this class. The average test grade is 56.82 with a SD of 6.98. How many points on the test did you need to get to get an A?

6 Step 1: Sketch out question.05

7 Step 2: Look in Table Z.05 Z score = 1.64

8 Step 3: Find the X score that goes with the Z score Must solve for X X =  + (z)(  ) 68.26 = 56.82 + (1.64)(6.98)

9 Step 3: Find the X score that goes with the Z score Must solve for X X =  + (z)(  ) 68.26 = 56.82 + (1.64)(6.98) Thus, a you need a score of 68.26 to get an A

10 Practice The prestigious Whatsamatta U will only take people scoring in the top 97% on the verbal section SAT (i.e., they reject the bottom 3%). What is the lowest score you can get on the SAT and still get accepted? Mean = 500; SD = 100

11 Step 1: Sketch out question.03

12 Step 2: Look in Table C Z score = -1.88.03

13 Step 3: Find the X score that goes with the Z score Must solve for X X =  + (z)(  ) 312 = 500 + (-1.88)(100)

14 Step 3: Find the X score that goes with the Z score Must solve for X X =  + (z)(  ) 312 = 500 + (-1.88)(100) Thus, you need a score of 312 on the verbal SAT to get into this school

15 SPSS Problem and slides

16 Is this quarter fair? How could you determine this? You assume that flipping the coin a large number of times would result in heads half the time (i.e., it has a.50 probability)

17 Is this quarter fair? Say you flip it 100 times 52 times it is a head Not exactly 50, but its close –probably due to random error

18 Is this quarter fair? What if you got 65 heads? 70? 95? At what point is the discrepancy from the expected becoming too great to attribute to chance?

19 Basic logic of research

20 Start with two equivalent groups of subjects

21 Treat them alike except for one thing

22 See if both groups are different at the end

23 Or – Single Group Subjects Give Treatment -- Prozac Dependent Variable Happiness

24 Do something Subjects Give Treatment -- Prozac Dependent Variable Happiness

25 Measure DV Subjects Give Treatment -- Prozac Dependent Variable Happiness

26 Compare Group to Population Subjects Give Treatment -- Prozac Dependent Variable Happiness Population Happiness Score

27 Example You randomly select 100 college students living in a dorm They complete a happiness measure –(1 = unhappy; 4 = neutral; 7 = happy) You wonder if the mean score of students living in a dorm is different than the population happiness score (M = 4)

28 The Theory of Hypothesis Testing Data are ambiguous Is a difference due to chance? –Sampling error

29 Population You are interested in the average self- esteem in a population of 40 people Self-esteem test scores range from 1 to 10.

30 Population Scores 1,1,1,1 2,2,2,2 3,3,3,3 4,4,4,4 5,5,5,5 6,6,6,6 7,7,7,7 8,8,8,8 9,9,9,9 10,10,10,10

31 Histogram

32 What is the average self-esteem score of this population? Population mean = 5.5 Population SD = 2.87 What if you wanted to estimate this population mean from a sample?

33 What if.... Randomly select 5 people and find the average score

34 Group Activity Why isn’t the average score the same as the population score? When you use a sample there is always some degree of uncertainty! We can measure this uncertainty with a sampling distribution of the mean

35 EXCEL

36 INTERNET EXAMPLE http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~lane/stat_sim/sam pling_dist/index.html

37 Sampling Distribution of the Mean Notice: The sampling distribution is centered around the population mean! Notice: The sampling distribution of the mean looks like a normal curve! –This is true even though the distribution of scores was NOT a normal distribution

38 Central Limit Theorem For any population of scores, regardless of form, the sampling distribution of the mean will approach a normal distribution a N (sample size) get larger. Furthermore, the sampling distribution of the mean will have a mean equal to  and a standard deviation equal to  / N

39 Sampling Distribution Tells you the probability of a particular sample mean occurring for a specific population

40 Sampling Distribution You are interested in if your new Self- esteem training course worked. The 5 people in your course had a mean self-esteem score of 5.5

41 Sampling Distribution Did it work? –How many times would we expect a sample mean to be 5.5 or greater? Theoretical vs. empirical –5,000 random samples yielded 2,501 with means of 5.5 or greater –Thus p =.5002 of this happening

42 Sampling Distribution 5.5 2,499 2,501 P =.4998 P =.5002

43 Sampling Distribution You are interested in if your new Self- esteem training course worked. The 5 people in your course had a mean self-esteem score of 5.8

44 Sampling Distribution Did it work? –How many times would we expect a sample mean to be 5.8 or greater? –5,000 random samples yielded 2,050 with means of 5.8 or greater –Thus p =.41 of this happening

45 Sampling Distribution 5.8 2,700 2,300 P =.59 P =.41

46 Sampling Distribution The 5 people in your course had a mean self-esteem score of 9.8. Did it work? –5,000 random samples yielded 4 with means of 9.8 or greater –Thus p =.0008 of this happening

47 Sampling Distribution 9.8 4,996 4 P =.9992 P =.0008

48 Logic 1) Research hypothesis –H 1 –Training increased self-esteem –The sample mean is greater than general population mean 2) Collect data 3) Set up the null hypothesis –H 0 –Training did not increase self-esteem –The sample is no different than general population mean

49 Logic 4) Obtain a sampling distribution of the mean under the assumption that H 0 is true 5) Given the distribution obtain a probability of a mean at least as large as our actual sample mean 6) Make a decision –Either reject H 0 or fail to reject H 0

50 Hypothesis Test – Single Subject You think your IQ is “freakishly” high that you do not come from the population of normal IQ adults. Population IQ = 100 ; SD = 15 Your IQ = 125

51 Step 1 and 3 H 1 : 125 > μ H o : 125 < or = μ

52 Step 4: Appendix Z shows distribution of Z scores under null -3  -2  -1   1  2  3 

53 Step 5: Obtain probability -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  125

54 Step 5: Obtain probability -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  125 (125 - 100) / 15 = 1.66

55 Step 5: Obtain probability -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  125 Z = 1.66.0485

56 Step 6: Decision Probability that this score is from the same population as normal IQ adults is.0485 In psychology –Most common cut-off point is p <.05 –Thus, your IQ is significantly HIGHER than the average IQ

57 One vs. Two Tailed Tests Previously wanted to see if your IQ was HIGHER than population mean –Called a “one-tailed” test –Only looking at one side of the distribution What if we want to simply determine if it is different?

58 One-Tailed -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  p =.05 Did you score HIGHER than population mean? Want to see if score falls in top.05 μ H 1 : IQ > μ H o : IQ < or = μ

59 Two-Tailed -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  p =.05 Did you score DIFFERNTLY than population mean? μ p =.05 H 1 : IQ = μ H o : IQ = μ

60 Two-Tailed -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  p =.05 Did you score DIFFERNTLY than population mean? PROBLEM: Above you have a p =.10, but you want to test at a p =.05 μ p =.05 H 1 : IQ = μ H o : IQ = μ

61 Two-Tailed -3  -2  -1   1  2  3  p =.025 Did you score DIFFERNTLY than population mean? μ p =.025 H 1 : IQ = μ H o : IQ = μ

62 Step 6: Decision Probability that this score is from the same population as normal IQ adults is.0485 In psychology –Most common cut-off point is p <.05 –Note that on the 2-tailed test the point of significance is.025 (not.05) –Thus, your IQ is not significantly DIFFERENT than the average IQ

63

64 Problems Problems with Null hypothesis testing Logic is backwards: Most think we are testing the probability of the hypothesis given the data Really testing the probability of the data given the null hypothesis!

65 Practice 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.1

66 4.7 Z = (490-650) / 50 = -3.2 p =.0007 (490 or lower)

67 4.8 Because students are being selected with high GREs (restricted range)

68 4.9 Would not be normally distributed –Positively skewed

69 4.1 a) Null = last nights game was an NHL game B) Would expect that a team would score between 0 – 6 ponits (null hypothesis). Because the actual scores are a lot different we would reject the null.


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