Exam 7: Statistical Significance, Effect Size, and Confidence Intervals
Exam 1: Introduction to Social Science Research Principles and Terminology3 Questions
Exam 2: Measures of Central Tendency2 Questions
Exam 3: Measures of Variability3 Questions
Exam 4: The Normal Distribution3 Questions
Exam 5: Standardization and Z Scores4 Questions
Exam 6: Standard Errors10 Questions
Exam 7: Statistical Significance, Effect Size, and Confidence Intervals8 Questions
Exam 8: T Tests9 Questions
Exam 9: One-Way Analysis of Variance5 Questions
Exam 10: Factorial Analysis of Variance2 Questions
Exam 11: Repeated-Measures Analysis of Variance3 Questions
Exam 12: Correlation3 Questions
Exam 13: Regression3 Questions
Exam 14: Nonparametric Statistics8 Questions
Exam 15: Factor Analysis and Reliability Analysis: Data Reduction Techniques6 Questions
Exam 16: Person-Centered Analysis7 Questions
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What, exactly, does a p value tell you?
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The probability that a result (i.e., statistic) was obtained by chance, or random sampling error.
Suppose that I have a sample of 25 women and they spend an average of $100 a week dining out, with a standard deviation of $20. Create a 95% confidence interval for the mean and wrap words around your results.
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CI95 = 100 +/- (4)(2.064) 100 +/- 8.26 91.74, 108.26. We are 95% confident that the population mean is in this interval.
When you say that a result is NOT statistically significant, what exactly does that mean?
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It means that you have not ruled out the possibility that the results were due to chance and have concluded that there is no effect in the population(s).
Suppose I have a randomly selected sample of 25 first-grade girls. I find that this sample has an average 5 dolls with a standard deviation of 1.5. Calculate a 99% confidence interval for the population mean and wrap words around it
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When we say that a result is statistically significant what exactly does that mean? (Your answer should include a discussion of the role of the alpha level and the p value).
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My mother is one of those crazy cat people who has 20 cats. She thinks because she loves them so much they are healthier than most cats. I want to know whether this is true. Suppose that in the population of cats, the average "health index" score is 10. The average "health index" score for my mom's cats is 11, with a standard deviation of 2. (For the purposes of this question, pretend that my mom's cats represent a random sample taken from the larger population.)
a. State the null and alternative hypotheses
b. Chose an alpha level.
c. Decide whether you are doing a 1-tailed or 2-tailed test (explain why)
d. State your degrees of freedom.
e. Find and report your critical value for t.
f. Compute your observed t value.
g. Decide whether to reject or fail to reject Ho
h. What does that mean, exactly, to say that this result is statistically significant?
i. Calculate and report a 95% confidence interval for the mean and wrap words around it.
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My wife used to work for the Gap. Ever since she started working there, I've become very sensitive to the way people dress, and it seems to me like every adult in America between the ages of 18-40 owns about six items of gap clothing. Upon hearing this, you think "Dr. Urdan's crazy! That's way too high! I bet the average adult doesn't own nearly that many articles of Gap clothing." Suppose you wanted to test this hypothesis. You select a random sample of 20 American adults between the ages of 18-40 and find that, on average, each owns five items of Gap clothing, with a standard deviation of 1. Using an alpha level of .01, tell me what you conclude about our competing hypotheses. Wrap words around your final result.
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In the population of students who take the SAT, the average combined score is 1600. I wonder whether students in Ohio differ from the population of students who take the SAT. Suppose I select a random sample of 100 students from Ohio and find that their average SAT score was 1630 with a standard deviation of 200.
a. Write the null and alternative hypotheses for this research question.
b. Is the difference between the sample mean and the population mean is statistically significant using an alpha level of .05?
c. Then calculate the 99% confidence interval for the mean and wrap words around it.
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