PSYC4700 2023 January Assignments Latest (Full)

Question # 00837595 Posted By: solutionshare7 Updated on: 01/20/2023 09:05 PM Due on: 01/21/2023
Subject Psychology Topic General Psychology Tutorials:
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PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 1 Assignment  

Basics of Research and Statistics

Criterion: Explain data in a table.

Instructions: Read the following and answer the question.

Gun ownership in the United States. Data from Gallup polls over a 40-year period show how gun ownership in the United States has changed. The results are described in the table below, with the percentage of Americans who own guns given in each of 5 decades:

Year        %

1972     43

1982     42

1992     48

2002     40

2012     43

Source: Reported at http://www.gallup.com/poll/1645/Guns.aspx

1.            Are the percentages reported here an example of descriptive statistics or interferential statistics?

2.            Based on the percentages given in the table, how has gun ownership in the United States changed over the past 40 years?

Problem Set 1.3: Understanding Sample and Population

Criterion: Describes the relationship between population and sample.

Instructions: Read the following and answer the question.

Height and educational attainment. Szklarska et al. (2007) hypothesized that taller young men are more likely to move up the scale of educational attainment compared with shorter individuals from the same social background. They recruited 91,373 19-year-old men to participate in the study.

Do these participants most likely represent a sample or population? Explain.

(Assignment continues on next page.)

Problem Set 1.4: Constants and Variables

Criterion: Identify constants and variables.

Instructions: Identify whether the following are constants or variables.

1.            8: ___________________

2.            −5: __________________

3.            –x: __________________

4.            y: ___________________

5.            0: ___________________

6.            xy: __________________

Problem Set 1.5: Create a Data Set for Use in JASP

Criterion: Enter and display data for use in JASP.

Data: Five social media users spent the following number of minutes viewing Twitter:

                15.21, 46.18, 12.45, 65.486, 26.852.

Instructions: Use the supplied data to complete the steps below.

1.            Open Excel.

2.            In cell A1, type Minutes. The variable of Minutes is continuous.

3.            In cells A2-A6, enter the supplied data in the column labeled Minutes.

4.            Save your data set as a .csv file

5.            Open JASP.

6. In the sandwich menu, scroll down to OPEN, then select COMPUTER. Locate your .csv file and click it to open it.

7.            Take a screenshot of your data in JASP and paste it below.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 2 Assignment  

Data:

1.            The frequency of businesses with at least 20 employees: __________

2.            The frequency of college students with less than a 3.0 GPA: __________

3.            The percentage of women completing 1, 2, 3, or 4 tasks simultaneously: __________

4.            The proportion of pregnancies performed in public or private hospitals: __________

5.            The percentage of alcoholics with more than 2 years of substance abuse: __________

Problem Set 2.3: Reading a Chart

Criterion: Locate data on a chart.

Instructions: Read the following and answer the questions.

Participant Characteristics

Profession           Count

                Type      Token

College Professor

Clinical Psychologist

Unknown            24,541

23,617

479        878,261

751,188

927       

Total                      1,630,376          

1.            Do college professors or clinical psychologists in this sample speak more words overall (Token Count)? _______________

2.            Do college professors or clinical psychologists in this sample speak more different words (Type Count)? _______________

 (Assignment continues on next page.)

Problem Set 2.4: Understanding Percentages

Criterion: Identify distribution type and number of people.

Instructions: Read the following and answer the questions.

Perceptions of same-sex marriage. In June 2016, a CBS News poll asked a sample of adults worldwide whether it should be legal or not legal for same-sex couples to marry (reported at http://www.pollingreport.com). The opinions of adults worldwide were as follows: 58%, legal; 33%, not legal; and 9%, unsure/no answer.

1.            What type of distribution is this? __________________________

2.            Knowing that 1,280 adults were polled nationwide, how many Americans polled felt that same-sex couples should be allowed to legally marry? __________________________

Problem Set 2.5: Create an Ascending Frequency Table in JASP

Criterion: Create an ascending frequency table in JASP.

Data: Use Clicks data set. This data set is a record of the number of clicks per hour in forty different tweets.

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Clicks data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Descriptives.

3.            Select Clicks and then click Arrow to send it over to the Variables box.

4.            Click Tables. In the menu that opens, check Frequency Tables.

5.            Copy and paste the ascending values frequency table into the Word document.

Note: You will continue to use this data set in the next two problems.

Problem Set 2.6: Construct a Bar Graph in JASP

Criterion: Construct a bar graph in JASP.

Data: Use Clicks data set. This data set is a record of the number of clicks per hour in forty different tweets.

Instructions: Complete the following steps to create a bar chart to examine the data:

1.            Download Clicks data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Descriptives.

3.            Select Clicks and then click Arrow to send it over to the Variables box.

4.            Click Basic Plots, then check Distribution Plots.

5.            Copy and Paste the bar graph below.

6.            Optional to answer: What is the shape of the distribution?

Note: You will continue to use this data set for the next problem.

(Assignment continues on next page.)

Problem Set 2.7: Construct a Pie Chart in JASP

Criterion: Construct a pie chart in JASP.

Data: Use Clicks data set. This data set is a record of the number of clicks per hour in forty different tweets.

Instructions: Complete the following steps to create a pie chart.

1.            Download Clicks data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Descriptives.

3.            Select Clicks and then click Arrow to send it over to the Variables box.

4.            Click Basic Plots, then check Pie charts.

5.            Copy and paste the pie graph below.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 3 Assignment  

Central Tendency

Instructions: Complete the following steps:

o             Install the data analytics package in Excel.

o             If you are unsure about how to do this, visit Load the Analysis Toolpak in Microsoft Excel, which has tutorials for both Windows and Mac. Used with permission from Microsoft.

o             Enter the data above into Excel using the variable name Data. In cell A1, type the word “Data.” Then, enter the data above in cells A2 to A11.

o             In the Toolbar, click Data Analysis, Select Descriptive Statistics, then click OK.

o             Next to input range type: $A$2:$A$11

o             Double check that summary statistics has a check next to it.

o             Click OK. A new sheet will appear to the right with your data.

o             Copy and paste the descriptive statistics table below.

o             Highlight the range, mean, and standard deviation. 

Problem Set 3.5: Range, Variance, and Standard Deviation in JASP

Criterion: Calculate measures of variability in JASP.

Data: Use Likes data set. This data set is a sample of likes per post on Facebook.  

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Likes data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Descriptives.

3.            Select Likes and then click Arrow to send it over to the Variables box.

(Assignment continues on next page.)

4.            Check Transpose descriptives table.

5.            Select Statistics. In the menu that opens, check the boxes for Mean, Std. deviation, Variance, and Range. Deselect all other boxes.

6.            Copy and paste the descriptive statistics table below.

7.            Highlight the range, mean, and standard deviation. 

8.            Answer: Does your mean equal the mean calculated in Problem Set 3.4? __________

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 4 Assignment  

Probability

Instructions: Read the following and answer the questions.

Judging the humorousness of “lawyer” jokes. Stillman et al. (2008) conducted a study where participants listened to a variety of jokes. To determine how funny the jokes were, the researchers asked a group of 86 undergraduates to rate the jokes on a scale from 1 (very unfunny) to 21 (very funny). Participants rated a “lawyer joke” as one of the funniest jokes, with a rating of 14.48 ± 4.38 (M ± SD).

(Assignment continues on next page.)

Assuming that these data are normally distributed:

1.            What was the rating that marks the cutoff for the top 10% of participant ratings for this joke?

2.            How many of the 86 undergraduates gave the joke a rating of at least 10? ___________________________

Problem Set 4.4: Calculating z Scores in JASP

Criterion: Calculate z scores using JASP.

Data: Use the Ratings data set. This data set is a record of how a sample of senior citizens rated the Internet on a 1–10 scale, with 1 being “really distrust it” and 10 being “completely trust it”:

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Ratings data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            Just below the Toolbar, click the + sign next to the column labeled Rating.

3.            Type “Z scores” in the box, then click Create Column. A formula box will appear below the Toolbar.

4.            Use the scrollbar on the right side of the formula box to scroll down and select zScores(y).

5.            On the left side of the box, click Rating, then drag it into the formula box to replace the word values. Click Compute column at the bottom of the formula box.  You will see that the z scores have been added to the file. Paste a screenshot of the data set, showing the z scores, into the Word document.

6.            Answer: Which number of ratings is closest to the z score of 0?

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 5 Assignment  

Hypothesis, Effect Size, and Power

Instructions: Read each of the following three scenarios and answer the questions.

1.            Two researchers make a test concerning the effectiveness of a drug use treatment. Researcher A determines that the effect size in the population of males is d = 0.36; Researcher B determines that the effect size in the population of females is d = 0.20. All other things being equal, which researcher has more power to detect an effect? Explain. ______________________________________________________________________

2.            Two researchers make a test concerning the levels of marital satisfaction among military families. Researcher A collects a sample of 22 married couples (n = 22); Researcher B collects a sample of 40 married couples (n = 40). All other things being equal, which researcher has more power to detect an effect? Explain.

3.            Two researchers make a test concerning standardized exam performance among senior high school students in one of two local communities. Researcher A tests performance from the population in the northern community, where the standard deviation of test scores is 110 ( ); Researcher B tests performance from the population in the southern community, where the standard deviation of test scores is 60 ( ). All other things being equal, which researcher has more power to detect an effect? Explain.

Problem Set 5.3: Hypothesis, Direction, and Population Mean

Criterion: Explain the relationship between hypothesis, tests, and population mean.

Instructions: Read the following and answer the question.

Directional versus nondirectional hypothesis testing. Cho and Abe (2013) provided a commentary on the appropriate use of one-tailed and two-tailed tests in behavioral research. In their discussion, they outlined the following hypothetical null and alternative hypotheses to test a research hypothesis that males self-disclose more than females:

•              H0: µmales − µfemales ≤ 0

•              H1: µmales − µfemales > 0

1.            What type of test is set up with these hypotheses, a directional test or a nondirectional test?

2.            Do these hypotheses encompass all possibilities for the population mean? Explain.

Problem Set 5.4: Hypothesis, Direction, and Population Mean

Criterion: Explain decisions for p values.

Instructions: Read the following and respond to the prompt.

The value of a p value. In a critical commentary on the use of significance testing, Lambdin (2012) explained, “If a p < .05 result is ‘significant,’ then a p = .067 result is not ‘marginally significant’” (p. 76).

Explain what the author is referring to in terms of the two decisions that a researcher can make.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 6 Assignment  

t Tests

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Scores data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click T-tests. In the menu that appears, under Classical, select Independent-samples T-test.

3.            Select Score and then click the top Arrow to send it over to the Dependent Variables box.

4.            Select Group and then click the bottom Arrow to send it over to the Grouping Variable box.

5.            Make sure the Student box is selected. Also select Descriptives and deselect any other boxes.

6.            Copy and paste the output into the Word document.

Problem Set 6.4: Independent Samples t Test

Criterion: Identify IV, DV, and hypotheses and evaluate the null hypothesis for an independent samples t test.

Data: Use the information from Problem Set 6.3.

Instructions: Complete the following:

a.            Identify the IV and DV in the study. _____________________________________

b.            State the null hypothesis and the directional (one-tailed) alternative hypothesis. ___________________________________________________

c.             Can you reject the null hypothesis at α = .05? Explain why or why not. ___________________________________________________

Problem Set 6.5: Independent t Test using Excel

Criterion: Calculate an independent samples t test in Excel.

Instructions: Complete the following steps:

a.            Open Excel.

b.            On an empty tab, enter the data from this information:

Depression Scores: Group 1: 34, 25, 4, 64, 14, 49, 54 ; Group 2: 24, 78, 59, 68, 84, 79, 57

c.             Use column A for group 1 and column B for Group 2. In Cell A1, enter 1. In cell B1, enter 2.

d.            Enter the data for each group below the label.

e.            Click Data Analysis, select t-Test: Two-Sample Assuming Equal Variances. Click OK.

f.             In Variable 1 Range enter $A$2:$A$8. (Or, click the graph icon at the right of the box and highlight your data for Group 1. Then, click the graph icon.)

g.            In Variable 2 Range enter $B$2:$B$8.

h.            Then click OK. Your results will appear on a new tab to the left.

i.              Return to your data. Click Data Analysis, select t-Test: Two-Sample Assuming Unequal Variances. Then click OK.

j.             In Variable 1 Range enter $A$2:$A$8. (Or, click the graph icon at the right of the box and highlight your data for Group 1. Then, click the graph icon.)

k.            In Variable 2 Range enter $B$2:$B$8.

l.              Then click OK. Your results will appear on a new tab to the left.

m.           Copy the results from both t tests below.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 7 Assignment  

ANOVA

Instruction: Read the following and answer the question.

Data: Life satisfaction among sport coaches. Drakou et al. (2006) tested differences in life satisfaction among sport coaches. They tested differences by sex, age, marital status, and education. The results of each test in the following table are similar to the way in which the data were given in their article.

Independent Variables   Life Satisfaction

                M            SD           F              p

Sex                                         0.68       .409

Men       3.99       0.51                                      

Women 3.94       0.49                                      

Age                                        3.04       .029      

20s         3.85       0.42                                      

30s         4.03       0.52                                      

40s         3.97       0.57                                      

50s         4.02       0.50                                      

Marital status                                    12.46    .000      

Single    3.85       0.48                                      

Married                4.10       0.50                                      

Divorced              4.00       0.35                                      

Education                                            0.82       .536      

High school         3.92       0.48                                      

Postsecondary   3.85       0.54                                      

University degree             4.00       0.51                                      

Masters 4.00       0.59                                      

1.            Which factors were significant at a .05 level of significance? ______________________

2.            State the number of levels for each factor. ____________________________________

Problem Set 7.3: One-way ANOVA in JASP

Criterion: Calculate an ANOVA in JASP.

Data: Use the Stress data set. This data set is a record of the amount of fat (in grams) consumed in a buffet-style lunch among professional bodybuilders under conditions of high, moderate, and low stress.

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Stress data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click ANOVA. In the menu that appears, under Classical, select ANOVA.

3.            Select Fat grams consumed and then click the upper Arrow to send it over to the Dependent Variable box.

4.            Select Stress level and then click the lower Arrow to send it over to the Fixed factors box.

5.            Check the Descriptive statistics box.

6.            Copy and paste the output below.

Note: You will continue to use this data set for Problem Set 7.6.

Problem Set 7.4: One-way ANOVA in Excel

Criterion: Calculate an ANOVA in Excel.

Instructions: Use the data from the table below to complete the following steps:

a.            Open Excel to an empty sheet.

b.            Enter the data from this table:

Stress Levels

High       Moderate            Low

10           9             9

7             4             4

8             7             6

12           6             5

6             8             7

 

c.             In Row 1, enter High in cell A1, Moderate in cell B1, and Low in cell C1.

d.            In the toolbar, click Data Analysis, select Anova: Single Factor, and click OK.

e.            In Input Range: $A$1:$C$6, put a check next to Labels in First Row, click OK.

f.             Results will appear in a new sheet to the left, copy and paste the input below.

Problem Set 7.5: One-way ANOVA Results in APA Style

Criterion: Report ANOVA results in APA format.

Data: Use the results from Problem Set 7.4.

Instructions: Complete the following:

a.            State the null hypothesis. ___________________________________

b.            Report your results in APA format (as you might see them reported in a journal article). ___________________________________

Problem Set 7.6: Tukey HSD Test in JASP

Criterion: Calculate post hoc analyses in JASP.

Data: Use Stress data set from Problem Set 7.3.

Instructions: Complete the steps below. (Note: The first 7 steps below are repeated from Problem Set 7.3.).

1.            Download Stress data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click ANOVA. In the menu that appears, under Classical, select ANOVA.

3.            Select Fat grams consumed and then click the upper Arrow to send it over to the Dependent Variable box.

4.            Select Stress level and then click the lower Arrow to send it over to the Fixed factors box.

5.            Check the Descriptive statistics box.

6.            Select Post-Hoc Tests. In the menu that appears, select Stress level and then click the Arrow to move it from the left to the right box.

7.            Check Standard and Tukey and uncheck any other boxes in the Post-Hoc area.

8.            Copy and paste the output below.

Note: You will use these results for Problem Set 7.7.

Problem Set 7.7: Tukey HSD Interpretation

Criterion: Interpret Tukey HSD results from JASP output.

Data: Use your output from Problem Set 7.6.

Instructions: Identify where significant differences exist at the .05 level between the stress levels.

Problem Set 7.8 Variables for Week 9 Assignment

Criterion: Define your two variables for the Week 9 Assignment.

Instructions: In this section you need to define the two specific variables you selected from the Grades data file for use in the Week 9 assignment and you need to define them in the following ways: (1) variable name and definition, (2) scale of measurement (nominal, ordinal, interval, or ratio) which ties into WHICH type of statistical analysis you can use (Privitera, 2018).

Reference

Privitera, G. J. (2018). Statistics for the behavioral sciences (3rd ed.). Sage.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 8 Assignment  

Chi-Square Tests

Instructions: Read the following and answer the questions.

The chi-square table. The degrees of freedom for a given test are listed in the column to the far left; the level of significance is listed in the top row to the right. These are the only two values you need to find the critical values for a chi-square test.

Work through the following exercise and write down what you see in the chi-square table. This will help familiarize you with the table.

Increasing k and ? in the chi-square table

1.            Record the critical values for a chi-square test, given the following values for k at each level of significance:

                .10         .05         .01

k = 10    ___         ___         ___

k = 16    ___         ___         ___

k = 22    ___         ___         ___

k = 30    ___         ___         ___

Note: Because there is only one k given, assume this is a goodness-of-fit test and compute the degrees of freedom as (k − 1).

2.            As the level of significance increases (from .01 to .10), does the critical value increase or decrease? Explain. ___________________________________

3.            As k increases (from 10 to 30), does the critical value increase or decrease? Explain your answer as it relates to the test statistic. ___________________________________

Problem Set 8.2: Parametric Tests

Criterion: Identify parametric tests.

Instructions: Based on the scale of measurement for the data, identify whether a test is parametric or nonparametric.

1.            A researcher measures the proportion of schizophrenic patients born in each season. ___________________________________

2.            A researcher measures the average age that schizophrenia is diagnosed among male and female patients. ___________________________________

3.            A researcher tests whether frequency of Internet use and social interaction are independent. ___________________________________

4.            A researcher measures the amount of time (in seconds) that a group of teenagers uses the Internet for school-related and non-school-related purposes. ___________________________________

Problem Set 8.3: Chi-Square Analysis in JASP

Criterion: Use JASP for a chi-square analysis.

Data: Use the Yummy data set. Tandy’s ice cream shop serves chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry ice cream. Tandy wants to plan for the future years. She knows that on average she expects to purchase 100 cases of chocolate, 75 cases of vanilla, and 25 cases of strawberry (4:3:1). This year, she purchased 133 cases of chocolate, 82 cases of vanilla, and 33 cases of strawberry. The Yummy data set is a record of ice cream sales this year.

Instructions: Complete the steps below.

1.            Download Yummy data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Frequencies. In the menu that appears, under Classical, select Multinomial Test.

3.            Select Flavor and then click the upper Arrow to send it over to the Factor box.

4.            Select Frequency and then click the lower Arrow to send it over to the Counts box.

5.            Click the circle next to Expected Proportions (χ2).

6.            Fill in 4 for Chocolate, 1 for strawberry, and 3 for Vanilla.

7.            Select the box for Descriptives and click the circle next to Proportions.

8.            Copy and paste the output to the Word document.

9.            Answer this: Was Tandy’s distribution of proportions the same as expected?

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 9 Assignment  

DATA ANALYSIS WORKSHEET – CORRELATIONS

Instructions

You will complete this assignment using the Data Analysis and Application Template [DOC] (also known as the DAA Template).

For help with statistical software, refer to JASP Step-by-Step: Correlations [PDF].

For information on the data set, refer to the Data Set Instructions [PDF] file.

Refer to the Course Study Guide [PDF] for information on analyses and interpretation.

The Grades [JASP] file is a sample data set. The data represent a teacher's recording of student demographics and performance on quizzes and a final exam across three sections of the course. Each section consists of 35 students (N = 105). There are 21 variables in the Grades [JASP].

This assignment is on correlations. You will analyze the following variables in the Grades [JASP] data set:

Variable                Definition

Quiz 1   Quiz 1: number of correct answers

GPA        Previous grade point average

Total      Total number of points earned in class

Final       Final exam: number of correct answers

Variables and Definitions

The DAA Template has five sections:

The Data Analysis Plan.

Testing Assumptions.

Results and Interpretation.

Statistical Conclusions.

Application.

Step 1: The Data Analysis Plan

In Step 1:

Name the four variables used in this analysis and whether they are categorical or continuous.

State a research question, null hypothesis, and alternate hypothesis for one X-Y pair. For example, you could articulate a research question, null hypothesis, and alternate hypothesis for quiz1 (X) and final (Y).

Step 2: Testing Assumptions

Test for one of the assumptions of correlation—normality.

Create a descriptive statistics table to assess normality. This table should include the four variables named above.

Paste the table in the DAA Template.

Interpret the skewness and kurtosis values and how you determined whether the assumption of normality was met or violated.

Step 3: Results and Interpretation

In Step 3:

Paste the output of the intercorrelation matrix for all specified variables:

First, report the lowest magnitude correlation in the intercorrelation matrix, including degrees of freedom, correlation coefficient, p value, and effect size. Interpret the effect size. Specify whether or not to reject the null hypothesis for this correlation.

Second, report the highest magnitude correlation in the intercorrelation matrix, including degrees of freedom, correlation coefficient, p value, and effect size. Interpret the effect size. Specify whether or not to reject the null hypothesis for this correlation.

Third, report the correlation between GPA and final, including degrees of freedom, correlation coefficient, p value, and effect size. Interpret the effect size. Analyze the correlation in terms of the null hypothesis.

Interpret statistical results against the null hypothesis, and state whether it is accepted or rejected.

Step 4: Statistical Conclusions

In Step 4:

Provide a brief summary of your analysis and the conclusions drawn.

Analyze the limitations of the statistical test.

Provide any possible alternate explanations for the findings and potential areas for future exploration.

Step 5: Application

In Step 5:

Analyze how you might use correlations in your field of study.

Name an independent variable and a dependent variable that would work for such an analysis and why studying it may be important to the field or practice.

Submit your completed DAA Template as an attached Word document in the assignment area.

Software

In this course, you will be using the following statistical software.

Jeffreys's Amazing Statistics Program (JASP).

Refer to the Tools and Software: JASP page on Campus for general information.

Make sure that your statistical software is downloaded, installed, and running properly on your computer.

 

PSYC4700 Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Week 10 Assignment  

Regression

Instruction: Complete steps below.

1.            Download Satisfaction data set. Double-click the icon to open the data set in JASP.

2.            In the Toolbar, click Regression. In the menu that appears, under Classical, select Linear regression.

3.            Select Life Satisfaction and then click the upper Arrow to send it over to the Dependent box.

4.            Set Method to “Enter.”

5.            Select Age and then click the Arrow to send it over to the Covariates box.

6.            Under Statistics, select Descriptives, Estimates, and Model Fit and deselect all other boxes.

7.            Copy and paste the output to this Word document.

Problem Set 10.2: Analysis of Regression in Excel

Criterion: Use Excel to complete an analysis of regression.

Data: Use the data from the table below.

Instruction: Complete the following steps.

a.            Open Excel and work in a new sheet.

b.            Enter the data from the table below. Cell A1 will be X. Cell B1 will be Y. Then, enter the data below

Stress Levels

High       Moderate            Low

10           9             9

7             4             4

8             7             6

12           6             5

6             8             7

c.             Cell A1 will be X. Cell B1 will be Y. Then, enter the data below.

d.            Go to the tool bar, click Data Analysis, and select Regression.

e.            Put a check next to Labels and Confidence Level.

f.             In Input Y Range: $B$1:$B$11, In Input X Range: $A$1:$A$11

g.            Select Ok. Your data will appear in a new Sheet to the left.

h.            Copy and paste the output to this document.

Problem Set 10.3: Identify Tests for Ordinal Data

Criterion: Identify tests for ordinal data.

Instruction: Read the following and answer the questions. 

Identify the appropriate nonparametric test for each of the following examples and explain why a nonparametric test is appropriate. 

1.            A researcher measures fear as the time it takes to walk across a presumably scary portion of campus. The times (in seconds) that it took a sample of 12 participants were 8, 12, 15, 13, 12, 10, 6, 10, 9, 15, 50, and 52.

2.            Two groups of participants were given 5 min to complete a puzzle. The participants were told that the puzzle would be easy. In truth, in one group, the puzzle had a solution (Group Solution), and in the second group, the puzzle had no solution (Group No Solution). The researchers measured stress levels and found that frustration levels were low for all participants in Group Solution and for all but a few participants who showed strikingly high levels of stress in Group No Solution. ___________________________________

3.            A researcher measured student scores on an identical assignment to see how well students perform for different types of professors. In Group Adviser, their professor was also their adviser; in Group Major, their professor taught in their major field of study; in Group Nonmajor, their professor did not teach in their major field of study. Student scores were ranked in each class, and the differences in ranks were compared.

4.            A researcher has the same participants rank two types of advertisements for the same product. Differences in ranks for each advertisement were compared. ___________________________________

5.            A professor measures student motivation before, during, and after a statistics course in a given semester. Student motivation was ranked at each time in the semester, and the differences in ranks were compared.

 

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