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Statistics for the Social Sciences

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Title: Statistics for the Social Sciences


1
Statistics for the Social Sciences
  • Psychology 340
  • Spring 2005

Analysis of Variance (ANOVA)
2
Outline
  • Brief review of last time ANOVA
  • Post-hoc and planned comparisons
  • Effect sizes in ANOVA
  • ANOVA in SPSS

3
Example
  • Effect of knowledge of prior behavior on jury
    decisions
  • Dependent variable rate how innocent/guilty
  • Independent variable 3 levels
  • Criminal record
  • Clean record
  • No information (no mention of a record)

4
Analysis of Variance
Test statistic
  • More than two groups

Criminal record Clean record No information
10 5 4
7 1 6
5 3 9
10 7 3
8 4 3


  • Need a measure that describes several difference
    scores
  • Variance
  • Variance is essentially an average squared
    difference

5
Testing Hypotheses with ANOVA
  • Hypothesis testing a five step program
  • Step 1 State your hypotheses
  • Step 2 Set your decision criteria
  • Step 3 Collect your data
  • Step 4 Compute your test statistics
  • Compute your estimated variances
  • Compute your F-ratio
  • Compute your degrees of freedom (there are
    several)
  • Step 5 Make a decision about your null hypothesis
  • Additional tests Planned comparisons Post hoc
    tests
  • Reconciling our multiple alternative hypotheses

6
Testing Hypotheses with ANOVA
  • Hypothesis testing a five step program
  • Step 1 State your hypotheses
  • Null hypothesis
  • H0 all the groups are equal
  • Alternative hypotheses (HA)
  • Not all of the populations all have same mean

Choosing between these requires additional test
7
1 factor ANOVA
  • Planned contrasts and Post-hoc tests
  • Further tests used to rule out the different
    alternative hypotheses
  • reject
  • reject
  • fail to reject
  • Alternative hypotheses (HA)
  • Not all of the populations all have same mean

8
Why do the ANOVA?
  • Whats the big deal? Why not just run a bunch of
    t-tests instead of doing an ANOVA?
  • Experiment-wise error
  • The type I error rate of the family (the entire
    set) of comparisons
  • ?EW 1 - (1 - ?)c where c of
    comparisons
  • e.g., If you conduct two t-tests, each with an
    alpha level of 0.05, the combined chance of
    making a type I error is nearly 10 in 100 (rather
    than 5 in 100)
  • Planned comparisons and post hoc tests are
    procedures designed to reduce experiment-wise
    error

9
Which follow-up test?
  • Planned comparisons
  • A set of specific comparisons that you planned
    to do in advance of conducting the overall ANOVA
  • General rule of thumb, dont exceed the number of
    conditions that you have (or even stick with one
    fewer)
  • Post-hoc tests
  • A set of comparisons that you decided to examine
    only after you find a significant (reject H0)
    ANOVA

10
Planned Comparisons
  • Different types
  • Simple comparisons - testing two groups
  • Complex comparisons - testing combined groups
  • Bonferroni procedure
  • Use more stringent significance level for each
    comparison
  • Basic procedure
  • Within-groups population variance estimate
    (denominator)
  • Between-groups population variance estimate of
    the two groups of interest (numerator)
  • Figure F in usual way

11
Post-hoc tests
  • Generally, you are testing all of the possible
    comparisons (rather than just a specific few)
  • Different types
  • Tukeys HSD test
  • Scheffe test
  • Others (Fishers LSD, Neuman-Keuls test, Duncan
    test)
  • Generally they differ with respect to how
    conservative they are.

12
Effect sizes in ANOVA
  • The effect size for ANOVA is r2
  • Sometimes called ?2 (eta squared)
  • The percent of the variance in the dependent
    variable that is accounted for by the independent
    variable
  • Size of effect depends, in part, on degrees of
    freedom
  • See table 12-7 in textbook for what is considered
    small medium and large

13
ANOVA in SPSS
  • Lets see how to do a between groups 1-factor
    ANOVA in SPSS (and the other tests too)
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