PSY 315 WK 4 PRACTICE PROBLEMS

University of Phoenix Material
Week Four Practice Problems
Prepare a written response to the following questions.
Chapter 7
- The table below shows ratings of various aspects of work and home life of 100 middle-class men in India who were fathers. Pick three rows of interest to you and explain the results to someone who is familiar with the mean, variance, and Z scores, but knows nothing else about statistics.
Comparison of Fathers' Mean Psychological States in the Job and Home Spheres (N= 100) | ||||
Sphere | ||||
Scale | Range | Work | Home | Work vs. home |
Important | 0-9 | 5.98 | 5.06 | 6.86*** |
Attention | 0-9 | 6.15 | 5.13 | 7.96*** |
Challenge | 0-9 | 4.11 | 2.41 | 11.49*** |
Choice | 0-9 | 4.28 | 4.74 | -3.38*** |
Wish doing else | 0-9 | 1.5 | 1.44 | 0.61 |
Hurried | 0-3 | 1.8 | 1.39 | 3.21** |
Social Anxiety | 0-3 | 0.81 | 0.64 | 3.17** |
Affect | 1-7 | 4.84 | 4.98 | -2.64** |
Social Climate | 1-7 | 5.64 | 5.95 | 4.17*** |
Note: Values for column 3 are tscores; df = 90 for all ttests. | ||||
**p< .01 | ||||
***p< .001 |
Chapter 8
12. Barker and colleagues (2012) compared 61 parents fo children who had a serious mental illness (SMI) to 321 parents of children withour such an illness. The researchers examined the parents’ reported levels of stress, their levels of a hormone called cortisol (levels of this hormone provide an indication of chronic stress), and their use of several types of medication. The table below shows the results of the study. Focusing on the parents’ number of stressors (the first row of the table) and the parents’ use of medications for anxiety or depression (the last row in the table), explain these results to a person who knows about the ttest for a single sample but is unfamiliar with the t test for independent means.
Descriptive Statistics and Mean-Level Comparisons |
|||||||||
SMI Parents |
Comparison Parents |
||||||||
N = 61 |
N = 321 |
||||||||
Mean |
SD |
Mean |
SD |
t |
p |
||||
Stress |
|||||||||
Number of stressors |
0.65 |
0.56 |
0.42 |
0.37 |
-3.08 |
0.00 |
|||
Stress severity sum |
1.89 |
1.63 |
1.16 |
1.1 |
-3.3 |
0.00 |
|||
Cortisol (nmol/L) |
|||||||||
Wake |
17.46 |
10.72 |
16.75 |
7.38 |
-0.14 |
0.90 |
|||
Out of bed |
22.83 |
11.48 |
24.19 |
10.59 |
1.13 |
0.26 |
|||
Bed |
5.72 |
8.56 |
4.22 |
5.57 |
-1.86 |
0.06 |
|||
Cortisol awakening response |
5.62 |
9.7 |
7.48 |
8.34 |
1.55 |
0.12 |
|||
Decline from out of bed |
17.13 |
11.35 |
20.11 |
10.71 |
1.97 |
0.05 |
|||
Medication use (proportion) |
|||||||||
Allergy |
0.26 |
0.44 |
0.16 |
0.37 |
-1.71 |
0.09 |
|||
Steroid |
0.2 |
0.4 |
0.12 |
0.33 |
-1.32 |
0.19 |
|||
Hormone |
0.13 |
0.34 |
0.14 |
0.35 |
0.25 |
0.80 |
|||
Anxiety or depression |
0.26 |
0.44 |
0.12 |
0.33 |
-2.36 |
0.02 |
14. For each of the following
studies, say whether you would use a t test for dependent means or a t test for
independent means.
a. A researcher measures the heights of 40 university students who are the
firstborn in their families and compares the 15 who come from large families to
the 25 who come from smaller families.
b. A researcher tests performance on a math skills test of each of 250
individuals before and after they complete a one-day seminar on managing test
anxiety.
c. A researcher compares the resting heart rate of 15 individuals who have been
taking a particular drug to the resting heart rate of 48 other individuals who
have not been taking the drug.
Chapter 9
23. An experiment is conducted in which 60 participants each fill out a
personality test, but not according to the way the participants see themselves.
Instead, 15 are randomly assigned to fill it out according to the way they
think theur mothers see them (that is, the way they think their mothers would
fill it out to describe the participants); 15 as their fathers would fill it
out for them; 15 as their best friends would fill it out for them; 15 as the
professors they know best would fill it out for them. The main results appear
in Table 9-17. Explain these results to a person who has never had a course in
statistics.
Means for Main Personality Scales for Each Experimental Condition
Scale Mother Father Friend Professor F(3, 56)
Conformity 24 21 12 16 4.21**
Extroversion 14 13 15 13 2.05
Maturity 15 15 22 19 3.11*
Self-Confidence 38 42 27 32 3.58*
*p < .05, **p < .01
24. Rosalie Friend (2001), and
educational psychologist, compared three methods of teaching writing. Students
were randomly assigned to three different experimental conditions involving
different methods of writing a summary. At the end of the two days of
instructions, participants wrote a summary. One of the ways it was scored was
the percentage of specific details of information it included from the original
material. Here is a selection from her article describing one of the findings:
The effect of summarization method on inclusion of important information was
significant F(2, 144) = 4.1032, p < .019. The mean scores (with standard
deviations in parantheses) were as follows: Argument Repetition, 59.6% (17.9);
Generalization, 59.8% (15.2); and Self-Reflection, 50.2% (18.0). (p.14)
a. Explain these results to a person who has never had a course in statistics.
b. Using the information in the preceding description, figure the effect size
for the study.

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Solution: PSY 315 WK 4 PRACTICE (A+)