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Regression Models w/ 2 Categorical Variables

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Title: No Slide Title Author: Calvin P. Garbin Last modified by: Calvin Garbin Created Date: 6/2/1998 3:06:44 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Regression Models w/ 2 Categorical Variables


1
Regression Models w/ 2 Categorical Variables
  • Sources of data for this model
  • Variations of this model
  • Definition and advantage of factorial research
    designs
  • 5 terms necessary to understand factorial
    designs
  • 5 patterns of factorial results for a 2x2
    factorial designs

2
  • As always, the model doesnt care where the data
    come from. Those data might be
  • 2 measured categorical variables (e.g., gender
    species)
  • 2 manipulated categorical variables (e.g., Tx1 v
    Tx2 FB v nFB)
  • a measured categorical variable (e.g., species)
    and a manipulated categorical variable (e.g., FB
    v nFB)

Like nearly every model in the ANOVA/regression/GL
M family this model was developed for and
originally applied to experimental designs with
the intent of causal interpretability !!! As
always, causal interpretability is a function of
design (i.e., assignment, manipulation control
procedures) not statistical model or the
constructs involved !!!
3
  • There are two important variations of this model
  • Main effects model
  • Terms for both categorical variables
  • No interaction assumes simple effect homgeneity
  • b-weights for the 2 categorical variables each
    represent main effect of that variable
  • 2. Interaction model
  • Terms for both categorical variables
  • Term for interaction - does not assume SE homogen
    !!
  • b-weights for 2 qual variables each represent the
    simple effect of that variable when the other
    variable 0
  • b-weight for the interaction term represented how
    the simple effect of one variable changes with
    changes in the value of the other variable (e.g.,
    the extent and direction of the interaction)

4
Showing this design is a 2x2 Factorial
Type of Therapy Initial
Diagnosis Group Individual
General clients diagnosed w/
clients diagnosed w/ Anxiety general
anxiety who general anxiety who
received group therapy received individual
therapy Social clients
diagnosed w/ clients diagnosed w/
Anxiety social anxiety who social
anxiety who received group
therapy received individual
therapy Participants in each cell of this
design have a unique combination of IV conditions.
5
The difficult part of learning about factorial
designs is the large set of new terms that must
be acquired. Heres a summary cell means --
the mean DV score of all the folks with a
particular combination of IV treatments
marginal means -- the mean DV score of all the
folks in a particular condition of the
specified IV (aggregated across conditions of
the other IV) Main effects involve the
comparison of marginal means. Simple effects
involve the comparison of cell means. Interactions
involve the comparison of simple effects.
6
Identifying Cell Means and Marginal Means
Type of Therapy Initial Diagnosis Group
Individual General
Anxiety 50 50 50
Social 90 10 50
Anxiety 70 30 Cell means ?
mean DV of subjects in a design cell Marginal
means ? average mean DV of all subjects in
one condition of an IV
7
Identifying Main Effects -- difference between
the marginal means of that IV (ignoring the
other IV) Type of Therapy Initial
Diagnosis Group Individual
General Anxiety 50
50 50 Social Anxiety 90
10 50 70
30 Main effect of Initial Diagnosis Main
effect of Type of Therapy
8
Identifying Simple Effects -- cell means
differences between conditions of one IV for a
specific level of the other IV Type of
Therapy Initial Diagnosis Group Individual
General Anxiety 50
50 1 Social Anxiety
90 10 2 a b Simple
effects of Initial Diagnosis for each Type of
Therapy a Simple effect of Initial
Diagnosis for group therapy b Simple effect
of Initial Diagnosis for individual therapy
9
Identifying Simple Effects -- cell means
differences between conditions of one IV for a
specific level of the other IV Type of
Therapy Initial Diagnosis Group Individual
General Anxiety 50
50 1 Social Anxiety
90 10 2 a b Simple
effects of Type of Therapy for each Initial
Diagnosis 1 Simple effect of Type of Therapy
for general anxiety patients 2 Simple effect of
Type of Therapy for social anxiety patients
10
5 basic factorial data patterns - 3 have
interactions 2 do not 1 Task
Presentation Paper
Computer Task Difficulty Easy
90 gt 70 simple effects are Hard
40 lt 60 opposite
directions There is an interaction of Task
Presentation and Task Difficulty as they relate
to performance. Easy tasks are performed better
using paper than using computer (90 vs. 70),
whereas hard tasks are performed better using the
computer than using paper (60 vs. 40).
11
  • 1a an important variation of this data pattern
  • I call this, The effect that isnt anywhere!
  • There is a significant interaction(p lt .05).
  • But neither simple effect is statistically
    significant !?!?!
  • Task Presentation
  • Paper Computer
  • Task Difficulty
  • Easy 90 70
    .
    Hard 40
    60

simple effects look like theyre in opposite
directions, but are both nulls!!!
  • Remember!
  • An interaction is that the SEs are different
    from each other.
  • The significant interaction tells us the 90gt70
    simple effect is different from the 40lt60 simple
    effect.

12
2 Task
Presentation Paper
Computer Task Difficulty Easy 90
90 one simple effect null
Hard 40 lt 70
one simple effect There is an interaction of
Task Presentation and Task Difficulty as they
relate to performance. Easy tasks are performed
equally well using paper and using the computer
(90 vs. 90), however, hard tasks are performed
better using the computer than using paper (70
vs. 40).
13
3 Task Presentation
Paper Computer Task Difficulty Easy 80
lt 90 simple effects in the
same direction, Hard
40 lt 70 but of different
sizes There is an interaction of Task
Presentation and Task Difficulty as they relate
to performance. Performance was better using the
computer than using paper, however this effect
was larger for hard tasks (70 vs. 40) than for
easy tasks (90 vs. 80).
14
There are the two basic patterns of
NON-interactions 4 Task
Presentation Paper
Computer Task Difficulty Easy
30 lt 50 both simple effects are in
the same direction and are Hard
50 lt 70 the same size There
is no interaction of Task Presentation and Task
Difficulty as they relate to performance.
Performance is better for computer than for paper
presentations (for both Easy and Hard
tasks). Notice the main effects will be
descriptive.
15
5 Task Presentation
Paper Computer Task
Difficulty Easy 50 50
both simple effects Hard 70
70 are nulls There is no
interaction of Task Presentation and Task
Difficulty as they relate to performance.
Performance is the same for computer and paper
presentations (for both Easy and Hard
tasks). Notice the main effects will be
descriptive.
16
We can rearrange the 5 basic patterns of results
from a 2x2 Factorial to help us think about
interactions and descriptive/misleading main
effects
1 lt vs. gt simple effects in
opposite directions 2. vs. lt one
null simple effect and one simple
effect 3. lt vs. lt simple effects in same
direction, but different sizes 4.
lt vs. lt simple effects of the same size
in the same direction 5. vs. both
null simple effects
Interaction -- simple effects of different size
and/or direction
Misleading main effects
Descriptive main effects
No Interaction -- simple effects are null or same
size
17
Heres yet another way of thinking about
interactions well need an example!! Brownies
great things worthy of serious theory
research!!!
The usual brownie is made with 4 blocks of
chocolate and 2 cups of sugar. Replicated
research tells us that the average rating of
brownies made with this recipe is about 3 on a
10-point scale.
My theory? People dont really like brownies!
What they really like is fudge! So, goes my
theory, making brownies more fudge-like will
make them better liked. How to make them more
fudge-like, you ask? Add more sugar more
chocolate!!!
18
So, we made up several batches of brownies and
asked people to taste a standardized amount of
brownie after rinsing their mouth with water,
eating an unsalted saltine cracker and rinsing
their mouth a second time. We used the same
10-point rating scale 1 this is the worst
plain brownie Ive ever had, 10this is the best
plain brownie Ive ever had.
Our first study
2-cups of sugar
4-cups of sugar
3
5
So, far so good!
19
4 blocks of choc.
8 blocks of choc.
Our second study
3
2
What????
Oh yeah! Unsweetened chocolate
Then the argument started.. One side We have
partial support for the theory adding sugar
helps, but adding chocolate hurts!!!
Other side We have not tested the theory!!!
What was our theory? Add more sugar more
chocolate!!! We need a better design!
20
4 blocks of choc.
8 blocks of choc.
2-cups of sugar
3
2
4-cups of sugar
5
What do we expect for the 4-cup 8-block
brownies?
standard brownie sugar effect
chocolate effect expected additive effect of
choc sugar expected score for 48 brownies
3 2 -
1 1 4
21
4 blocks of choc.
8 blocks of choc.
2-cups of sugar
3
2
4-cups of sugar
5
9
The effect of adding both simultaneously is 6
not 1???
How do we account for this ?
There is a non-additive joint effect of chocolate
and sugar!!!! The joint effect of adding
chocolate and sugar is not predictable as the sum
of the effects of adding each!!!
Said differently, there is an interaction of
chocolate and sugar that emerges when they are
added simultaneously.
22
4 blocks of choc. 0
8 blocks of choc. 1
2-cups of sugar 0
3
2
4-cups of sugar 1
5
9
DV b1sugar b2 choc b3Int
a a DV when sugar choc 0 ? 3 b1 SE
of sugar when choc 0 ? 2 b2 SE of choc when
sugar 0 ? -1 b3 SE dif
? 5 ? SE of sugar when choc
1 ? 2 5 7 ? SE of choc when sugar 1
? -1 5 4
23
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