Inferring differences between groups Flashcards

(38 cards)

1
Q

what questions must be asked when identified which test is appropriate for each research question?

A
  1. what are the two concepts in the research question?
  2. what is the level of measurement of the two variables that store information on the two concepts?
  3. what is the focus of the research question?
  4. for a continuous variable: is it sufficiently normally distributed?
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2
Q

what are some important notes to make when thinking about concepts?

A

○ Multiple categories does not indicate multiple concepts e.g. categories of non-smokers and smokers are 2 categories that indicate 1 concept
○ Concepts can be measured in multiple ways e.g. smoking could be measured as smoker or non-smoker or by measuring number of cigarettes smoked

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3
Q

how do you carefully consider your variables on SPSS?

A

○ Look at data view
○ Consider information of the study
○ Use descriptive statistics to make a reasoned judgement as to what the levels of measurement are

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4
Q

what are the different focuses of a research question?

A

difference between groups
difference over time
association

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5
Q

what does it mean if you are looking at a difference between groups?

A

categorical (binary) variable divides sample into different groups
groups are compared in terms on their average score on a second variable

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6
Q

what does it mean if you are looking at a difference over time?

A

concept is measured on two (or more) occasions
comparing whether an average score has changed over time

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7
Q

what does it mean if you are looking at an association?

A

looking at the tendency for the scores on two variables to change in a common manner

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8
Q

what assumption do we make about continuous variables and why?

A

We assume that the scores on a continuous variable are normally distributed because if not then we cannot trust the results of the test
If this assumption is not true, then a different bivariate statistical test will need to be carried out

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9
Q

what are the different ways to determine whether a continuous variable is normally distributed?

A
  • Visual inspection of histogram and boxplots - not very scientific
  • Rules of thumb for acceptable kurtosis and skewness values
  • Z test on the kurtosis and skewness
  • Complex statistical tests of non-normality e.g. Kolmogorov-Smirnov; Shapiro-Wilk)
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10
Q

what are the two statistics to look at when assessing if a continuous variable is normally distributed?

A

skewness - whether the curve is closer to the left or right side
kurtosis - whether the bell-shaped curve is wide or thin

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11
Q

how far from zero are skewness and kurtosis allowed to get?

A

close to 0 but does not need to be exactly 0

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12
Q

if the sample contains 50 or more sampled units…

A

treat the variable as if it were normally distributed (Ghasemi & Zahediasl, 2012)

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13
Q

if the sample contains less than 50 sampled units…

A

carry out Z test on the skewness and kurtosis values to evaluate whether the values of skewness and kurtosis are close enough to 0 for the distribution to be deemed normal (Kim, 2013)

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14
Q

steps of carrying out a Z test

A

○ Divide skewness value by its standard error
○ Divide kurtosis value by its standard error

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15
Q

if the values obtained from a Z test are between -1.96 and +1.96…

A

this shows a variable with normally distributed scores (Kim, 2013)

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16
Q

if the values obtained from a Z test are not between -1.96 and +1.96…

A

this shows a variable with non-normally distributed scores
use alternative non-parametric bivariate statistical test

17
Q

what are the different kinds of statistical tests?

A

parametric statistical tests
non-parametric statistical tests
- For most bivariate parametric statistical test there is an equivalent and alternative non-parametric test

18
Q

what are parametric statistical tests?

A

bivariate inferential statistical test used with continuous variables that are normally distributed

19
Q

what are non-parametric statistical tests?

A

bivariate inferential statistical test used with continuous variables that are not normally distributed

20
Q

when should independent t-test be used?

A

when looking at a difference between two groups with continuous variables that are normally distributed (parametric test)

21
Q

if you are looking at a difference between two groups with continuous variables that are normally distributed, which statistical test should you use?

A

independent t-test

22
Q

what is an independent t-test?

A
  • Gives a p-value which tells us how likely it is that the null hypothesis is true
  • Less than 5% chance that null hypothesis is correct to be able to accept the alternative hypothesis
23
Q

when should a Mann Whitney U test be used?

A

when looking at a difference between two groups with continuous variables that are not normally distributed (non-parametric test)

24
Q

if you are looking at a difference between two groups with continuous variables that are not normally distributed, which statistical test should you use?

A

Mann Whitney U test

25
if you are looking at a difference between two groups with ordinal variables, which statistical test should you use?
Mann Whitney U test
26
if you are looking at a difference between two groups with nominal variables, which statistical test should you use?
Chi square
27
what is the Mann Whitney U test?
- Ranks the scores of the continuous variable - Then analyses the ranked data - Compares two groups and tests the null hypothesis (p < 0.05) - 'the mean rank of the two groups is the same in the population' or 'there is no difference in the mean rank of the two groups' - There is some loss of data when using ranked data
28
steps of carrying out bivariate statistical tests using SPSS:
1. report p-values 2. SPSS output & report
29
how do you report p-values?
If p-value is more than 0.05 then the result is not significant so you accept the null hypothesis as it is likely to be true in the population i. n.s. (not significant) If p-value is less than 0.05 then look closer at p-value: ii. p<0.05 iii. p<0.01 iv. p< 0.001 Never report P=0.00 instead use p< 0.001
30
how do you carry out SPSS output & report for independent t-test?
Which group has the highest mean? Look at Levene's test for equality of variances to explore whether the data is homogenous or not: i. If value of Sig is more than 0.05 --> value is significant --> look at first row of table ii. If value of Sig is less than 0.05 --> value is not significant --> look at second row of table Report and write up: whether there is a significant difference between mean and standard deviation of both variables, followed by results of t-test in the form: t('df') = 't-value', p < 'p-value'
31
What elements from the SPSS table is needed when reporting the results of an independent samples t-test?
mean, standard deviation, t-statistic, degrees of freedom and significance value
32
how do you carry out SPSS output & report for Mann Whitney U test?
Which group has the highest mean rank? Look at p-value from test statistics: i. If p-value is more than 0.05 --> accept null hypothesis ii. If p-value is less than 0.05 --> reject null hypothesis Report and write up: whether there is a significant difference between the mean rank of both variables, followed by the value of U and p-value
33
If p-value is above 0.05...
then report as n.s.
34
What elements from the SPSS table is needed when reporting the results of a Mann Whitney U test?
mean rank, p-value, Mann-Whitney U value
35
what are the two types of research questions?
one-tailed two-tailed
36
how do you know if a research question is one-tailed?
If research question is concerned with the direction of the difference between groups OR difference over time only one way the question can be answered only one way the null hypothesis can be tested
37
how do you know if a research question is two-tailed?
If research question is concerned with the possibility of some difference between groups vs no difference OR difference over time vs no difference two ways the question can be answered two ways the null hypothesis can be tested
38
If you are looking at a one-tailed research question and only a two-tailed p-value is given...
then you must divide it by 2