Individual Differences - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Individual Differences

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Individual Differences & Correlations Psy 425 Tests & Measurements Furr & Bacharach Ch 3, Part 1 Nature of Variability Assumption: Differences exist among people A ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Individual Differences


1
Individual DifferencesCorrelations
  • Psy 425
  • Tests Measurements
  • Furr Bacharach
  • Ch 3, Part 1

2
Nature of Variability
  • Assumption
  • Differences exist among people
  • A diagnostic measure is capable of detecting
    those differences
  • Two kinds of differences
  • Interindividual (between people)
  • Intraindividual (within a single person)

3
Questions
  • Who will be admitted?
  • Who will benefit?
  • Who should be hired?
  • Who meets criteria for diagnosis?

4
Crucial assumption
  • Psychological differences exist
  • AND
  • the differences can be detected through
    well-designed measurement processes

5
Psychometric Conceptsof Reliability Validity
  • Are entirely dependent on differences among
    people

6
Individual Differences Psychological Tests
  • Research
  • Exposing people to different experimental
    conditions (experiences) measuring effects of
    these conditions on behavior
  • Determine the extent to which differences are a
    function of experimental conditions
  • Clinical settings
  • Diagnosis
  • Change over time

7
Variability
  • Differences among the scores within a
    distribution of scores

8
Assessment of Test Scores
  • For a single test
  • Detect and describe individual differences within
    the distribution of scores
  • Central tendency
  • Variability
  • Shape of the distribution

9
TEST SCORES
10
Central Tendency
  • typical score in a distribution of scores
  • Mean
  • Arithmetic Mean

11
MEAN
12
MEAN
13
Variability
  • Variance
  • Standard Deviation

14
Computing Variance
15
MEAN ? VARIANCE
Mean 17.17
16
DEVIATION
(X X) 1? 9 17.17 -8.17 2? 26 17.17
8.83 3? . . . . . .
Mean 17.17
17
Squared Deviation
SS S(X - X)2 Variance (s2) Standard
Deviation (s)
18
VARIANCE
856 30
s2
29
SS S(X - X)2 Variance (s2) Standard
Deviation (s)
19
Computing Standard Deviation
20
STDEV
856/30
SS S(X - X)2 Variance (s2) Standard
Deviation (s)
21
Assessing the Distribution of Scores
  • Frequency count
  • For each score or band of scores, count the
    number of individuals who received that score or
    who are within that band of scores
  • Plot the frequency distribution of scores
  • Ideal distribution?
  • Normal theoretically ideal
  • What do you usually get?

22
Types of Distributions
  • Normal
  • Symmetric on either side of the mean
  • For psychological tests,
  • Often assume that scores are normally distributed
  • Important assumption
  • Skewed

23
Distribution (2 wide)
Number of Participants
24
Distribution (5 wide)
Number of Participants
25
Normal Distribution
Number of Participants
26
Other Examples
27
Worksheet 1
  • Enter scores
  • Determine central tendency and variability
  • Graph frequency distribution of scores

28
Association between Distributions
  • Covariability
  • Degree to which two distributions of scores vary
    in a corresponding manner
  • What scores might co-vary?
  • Depression anxiety
  • Schizotypy autism
  • IQ GPA

29
TEST SCORES
30
What do you want to know about these scores?
31
Direction Magnitude
32
Direction of Relationship
  • Positive or direct association
  • High on one, high on the other
  • Negative or inverse association
  • High on one, low on the other

33
Magnitude of Relationship
  • Strong or weak association?
  • Strong
  • Consistency between variables
  • Weak
  • Inconsistency between variables

34
LOOK!
35
  • For each test
  • Central tendency
  • Variability

36
Covariance Correlation
37
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41
Covariance
  • Useful
  • Direction of association
  • Positive
  • Negative
  • Limited information
  • Magnitude?
  • Size of covariance effected by size of scales
  • Covariance between two small scale variables
    different than that between two large scale
    variables

42
Covariance
43
Correlation
  • INDEX OF CONSISTENCY OF INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCE
    SCORES
  • Easy to interpret
  • Range between -1.0 and 1.0
  • Reflects direction and magnitude of association
  • Bounded quality is obtained by dividing the
    covariance by the standard deviations of the two
    variables.

44
Correlation
45
Worksheet 2
  • Enter scores
  • Determine central tendency and variability
  • Determine cross-products
  • Determine covariance
  • Determine correlation
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