Research Methods Flashcards
All information that was taught to me while attending Vanier College's "Animal Health Technology" Program, located in St-Laurent Montreal.
What is the goal of statistics
Figure out if what we observe is the result of the factor studied or a background of normal variation.Evaluate what the numbers actually meanRepresent them in a way that communicates their meaning to others
What is a variable
A characteristic that varies between individuals
What is a nominal qualitative variable
EX: Color (Catergories)
What is an ordinal qualitative variable
EX: Body condition (Catergories)
What are some biological variations
Genetics, Environment, Gender, Age
What are two types of technical errors
Human errorsInstrument errors
What is a population
All representatives in a group
What is a sample
A subgroup of the population
What are descriptive statistics used for
Used to summarize data in diagrams, tables, mean, variance.
What is inferential statistics,
To generalize from the sample something that can be applied to the whole populationEstimation of a population’s parameterHypothesis testing (to investigate a theory about the data)
Which types of diagrams are used to represent qualitative data
Bar chartsPie charts
Which types of diagrams are used to represent quantitative data
Dot diagramHistogramStem and leaf diagramBox and whisker plotScatter diagram
What are the averages taken of central tendency
MeanMedianMode
What is used to measure dispersions (spread)
RangeVariationStandard deviation
What is the price we pay by using sampling instead of questioning the whole population?
The price we pay for sampling is that we cannot make statements of absolute certainty about the population.The doubt is expressed as a probability. The larger the sample, the more representative it is.
What are the six types of studies
¤ Observational vs experimental ¤ Cross-sectionnal vs longitudinal ¤ Cohort vs case-control
What are six things to consider when trying to increase precision of the estimates
¤ Replication¤ blocks¤ independant vs pairing¤ Confounders & Interaction ¤ Outliers¤ Missing data
Why is it impossible to prove something with statistics
Because of the sampling error. We are not directly measuring a population
What is a null hypothesis
A hypothesis proving that there is no difference
What is an alternate hypothesis
The opposite of the null hypothesis: there is a difference
What is the P value
Probability. Value that makes you decide if you reject Ho or not.
What does it mean if your P value is very small
it is unlikely that we could have obtained the observed results ifthe null hypothesis were true, so we reject Ho. There is a small probability that Ho is true.
What does it mean if your P value is very large
there is a high chance that we could have obtained the observed results if the null hypothesis were true, and we do not reject Ho. There is a large probability that Ho is true.
What does an A value of 0.01 mean
even more certain to have truly taken the right decision to reject Ho