class 13 Flashcards

1
Q

purpose of statistics in research

A

-describe
-explain
-make predictions
-examine causality
-generalize to entire population
-explore and test theories

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2
Q

clinical use of statistics

A

-analyzing research done by nursing staff
-reading or critiquing published reserach
-examining outcomes of nursing practice
-examine administrative data
-demonstrate a problem or need
-developing administrative reports

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3
Q

what is the purpose of descriptive stats?

A

describe and summarize data (e.g. averages, frequencies, etc)

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4
Q

what is the purpose of inferential stats?

A

test hypothesis and/or answer questions, objectives
-allow inference from a sample to a population

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5
Q

4 types of descriptive stats used to summarize data

A

-frequency distribution
-central tendency
-variability
-bivariate descriptive statistics

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6
Q

what is a frequency distribution?

A

-data values arranged from highest to lowest, with count of occurrences of each value
-allows to easily see highest and lowest values, and where data are clustered
data can be:
-symmetric vs skewed
-grouped vs ungrouped

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7
Q

normal frequency distribution

A

middle value is the mean and distributions go up or down following the standard deviation (+1,+2,+3 etc)
-the curve is even on both sides of the mean

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8
Q

kurotsis in frequency distributions

A

the degree to which the data clusters around the peak or the tails of the distribution

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9
Q

leptokurtic frequency distribution

A

data clusters around the mean (large peak with steep curve)

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10
Q

platykurtic frequency distribution

A

data is distributed evenly across the graph (curve has very little peak and low degree of curve)

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11
Q

grouped frequency distribution

A

data collected is in “groups” i.e. 10-20,21-30, 31-40 etc

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12
Q

positive skewed frequency distribution

A

the data is “ more negative” aka the mean is a lower number than the median
peak is close to the y-axis

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13
Q

negative skewed frequency distribution

A

data is “more positive” aka mean is a higher number than the median
peak is further from the y-axis

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14
Q

ungrouped data in frequency distributions

A

data collected is only 1 number not a range for each answer
i.e. how many kids do you have 1,2,3,4

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15
Q

what is central tendency

A

indicate what is “typical” (average) of the data
-three indexes: -mean, median, and mode

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16
Q

what is mode

A

it is a part of central tendency
the value or score that occurs the most frequently
i.e.1846444857 mode is 4

17
Q

what is median

A

it is a part of central tendency
the point that divides the scores in half (i.e. marks 50th percentile)

18
Q

what is mean

A

it is a part of central tendency
sum of values divided by number of values being summed

19
Q

what is variability

A

-measures of dispersion: the way data are spread within a set
2 common types: -range -standard deviation

20
Q

what is range

A

it is a part of variability
difference between highest & lowest scores in a data set
-calculated by subtracting lowest score from the highest score

21
Q

what is standard deviation

A

it is a part of variability
-summarizes average amount of deviation from the mean
-calculated using every value in data set
-more stable and widely used than range to measure variability

22
Q

what are bivariate descriptive statistics

A

-describe relationships between two variables
-text lists various types:
-cross-tabulations
-correlations
-descriptions of risk

23
Q

what is correlation

A

it is a part of bivariate descriptive statistics
-to what extent are two varaibles related to one another
-described using correlation coefficients :-direction -intensity
-can be positive or negative, strong or weak

24
Q

what is a positive correlation?

A

values move in the same direction i.e. increase in temp correlates to an increase in ice cream sales

25
Q

what is a negative correlation

A

values move in opposite directions i.e. increase in AC sales correlates to decrease in sweating

26
Q

what is a correlation coefficient

A

measures strength of correlation between to variables
range from -1.00 to +1.00
-sign (- vs +) indicates direction
-absolute value (i.e. value regardless of sign) indicates intensity
-several types:
-pearson’s r
-spearman’s rho
-Kendall’s tau

27
Q

what is pearson’s r

A

-part of bivariate descriptive statistics correlation coefficients
-usd to measure relationships in interval or ratio-level data
-used when data are assumed to be normally distributed
-reported as r=x

28
Q

what is spearman’s rho

A

-part of bivariate descriptive statistics correlation coefficients
-range from -1-+1
-used to measure relationships in ordinal level data
-may be used when data are not normally distributed
-reported as p=x

29
Q

what is a risk estimate

A

-it is a part of bivariate descriptive statistics
-range from 0-infinity
-1=no relationship
-value <1=risk factor
-value >1 = protective factor
-several types: Odds ratio (OR) Relative risk (RR)

30
Q

what is odds ratio

A

-it is part of risk estimate
-used to measure the odds of having been exposed to a condition if having developed an outcome of interest
-E.g. taking a sample of women who have postpartum depression and calculating their likelihood of having smoked during pregnancy
-reported as OR=x

31
Q

what is relative risk ratio

A

-used to measure the odds of developing an outcome of interest after having been exposed to a condition
-reported as RR=x
-e.g. in a study of the risk of smoking on PPD, taking a sample of pregnant women then examining them 6m after delivery to see if they developed postpartum depression