Post on 03-Jan-2016
Statistical Significance• We study Psychology in probabilities and likelihoods, NOT
absolutes (it’s a SOFT science)• We use p<.05 (5%) to determine significant difference
between 2 groups: probability results are due to chance is less than 5 %– MEANING: IF we looked at 2 groups from the earlier hypothesis
and find that 92% of high achieving students listen to music while studying, whereas 12% of low achieving students listen to music, we can INFER that listening to music increases achievement.• If the numbers were 92% listen in both groups, we can INFER
that studying to music will not make a difference in achievement.
• If we find 92% in the hi ach. Group listen to music, and the low group just doesn’t study, NO inference can be made!
Standard Deviation• tells you how tightly all the various examples are clustered around the mean in a
set of data.
• When the examples are pretty tightly bunched together and the bell-shaped curve is steep, the standard deviation is small. When the examples are spread apart and the bell curve is relatively flat, that tells you you have a relatively large standard deviation.
Why is this useful? Here's an example: If you are comparing test scores for different schools, the standard deviation will tell you how diverse the test scores are for each school.
Let's say Freer Elementary has a higher mean test score than Windsor Elementary. Your first reaction might be to say that the kids at Freer are smarter.
But a bigger standard deviation for one school tells you that there are relatively more kids at that school scoring toward one extreme or the other. By asking a few follow-up questions you might find that, say, Freer's mean was skewed up because the school district sends all of the gifted education kids to Freer. Or that Windsor’s scores were dragged down because students who recently have been "mainstreamed" from special education classes have all been sent to Windsor..
Standard Deviation in Action• A couple needs to be within one standard deviation of each other in intelligence (10 points in either direction). —Neil Clark Warren, founder of eHarmony.com
Distributions
• The distribution of data also gives us key info.
• We know that many human attributes…
• e.g height, weight, task skill, reaction time, anxiousness, personality characteristics, attitudes etc.
• …follow a normal distribution.
Figure 6. The distribution of IQ scores in male and female populations. Adjusted parameter values yielded a male-female gap of 0.162 SD in g equivalent to
2.43 IQ points in favor of men