Download Grunge Template - Professor Fell

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Chapter 10
The Hypothesis of Difference
Sampling Distribution of Differences
•Use a Sampling Distribution of Differences when we want to examine a hypothesis of difference
•We want to compare sets of scores from two samples
• EX: We want to find the average IQ of all students at Omega College (pop=6000)
-put all 6000 student names in a fishbowl
-randomly select 30 students with our left hand & 30 students with our right hand
-give them each an IQ test
-find a mean of 118 for students selected with our left hand (M1=118)
-find a mean of 115 for students selected with our right hand (M2=115)
-then we calculate the difference between these two means (118-115= 3)
-then, we randomly select another 30 students with the left hand and 30 with the right hand,
give them the IQ test & calculate the difference between the means….so on and so forth.
Mean of the Distribution of Differences: μM1-M2
-theoretically, if you add the differences between the means together and divide by the number of
differences, you could calculate the mean of the distribution of differences
-if we did that we should get a mean of approximately zero since all of the samples come from a
single population
**WHY? Because there should be the same number of positive differences as there are
negative differences so they will cancel each other out
Standard Error of Difference
Standard Error of Difference: allows us to predict the value of the standard deviation of the entire
distribution of differences between the means of successively drawn pairs of random samples.
-ie. the estimated standard deviation of the sampling distribution of differences
-based on information contained in just two samples
*Symbolized as SED
Formula:
Step 1: Calculate the means for M1 and M2
Step 2: Calculate the standard deviations for SD1 and SD2
Step 3: Calculate the standard error of the mean for SEM1 and SEM2
Step 4: Calculate the standard error of the difference
Standard Error of Difference Worksheet
Standard Error of Difference Homework due Next Class
Independent t-test
• Two-sample t-test for Independent Samples
-allows us to make a probability statement regarding whether two independently selected
samples represent a single population.
-“independent” means the samples are not dependent on each other
*ie: we can’t use this test if we are doing a repeated measure or matched subjects design
-Research Question: Are these two samples from the same population?
Ho: μ1 = μ2 The samples are from the same population
Ha: μ1 ≠ μ2 The samples are not from the same population (they are significantly different)
• Formula:
Evaluation of t
• In order to Reject Ho the t-value must fall within the .05 or .01 critical areas
*critical areas=rejection region
• We use the Levels of Significance (critical areas) to reduce the probability of
committing an alpha error
*the smaller the critical area, the stronger the conclusion to Reject Ho is
•After we calculate t, we need to determine the t-values at the .05 and .01 levels so
we can make a comparison
*ie. Does our observed t-value fall within the critical areas?
•We must calculate the degrees of freedom:
•In order to Reject Ho, the calculated t-value must be GREATER than the the tabled
t-value (Table C & D)
Evaluation of t
Evaluation of t
One Tail vs. Two-Tail
Advantage of the one-tail test: do not have to obtain as high of a
calculated t in order to reject the null, as we do with a two-tailed
Disadvantage of the one-tail test: the sign of the t-value matters
(whether it is positive or negative) thus limiting the ability to reject the
null
-if you predict a positive t-value (saying M1 is greater than M2)
then you must calculate a positive t-value to be able to reject the null
-if you predict a negative t-value (saying M1 is less than M2)
then you must calculate a negative t-value to be able to reject the null
Independent t-test Worksheet
Independent t-test Homework due Next Class
Type I & Type II Errors
Real
Life
Example:
Real
Life
Example:
ThePolly
producer
of Survivor
andshe
Pimp
Mybe
Ride,
Bruceand
BeresfordPregnantface
thinks
may
pregnant
takes a home
Redman,
is being
pregnancy
test.accused of murdering his wife in Mexico.
Ηo: Bruce is innocent
o: Polly is NOT pregnant
ΗaΗ
: Bruce
is guilty
Ηa: Polly is pregnant
Evidence strongly suggests that Bruce is innocent α
The pregnancy
test
givesinaNYC
negative
result.
-There
is video of
Bruce
on day
of murder
thinks
sheaisguilty
not pregnant
ThePolly
Court
passes
verdict but Polly is, in fact, pregnant.
β
Power
Power is our ability to Reject Ho
-we want power!!
-the more power we have, the more likely we are to reject Ho
-power is 1-β (β=probability that you won’t reject Ho)
Q: if β=.15 then what is the power of the test?
*conceptually, we want to pull this curve to the left
*researchers generally want power to get to .80
How can we increase power?
-increase our alpha levels
**Problem is, while you will reject more nulls this includes true nulls—increase Type 1 errors
-control for extraneous variables
**if we can get rid of variability that we don’t want, it can’t interfere with the variability we want
-reduce measurement error
**ie. Be precise in your measurement
-increase your sample size
**the more people you have, the more likely to find what you are looking for
**However, if it’s too large then you are likely to detect variability that isn’t meaningful