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Summary 1.3C Statistics: An Introduction (FSWPE1-032)

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Everything you need in one document! Summary of all tutorial meetings, required literature (Moore+Passer), articles and lectures that you need to prepare for the exam of 1.3C Statistics course at EUR. Very clear and well-written notes in English from the academic year 2019/20.

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1.3C Statistics 1- An introduction


↑ = more diff. = different bc =because f. = factors beh. = behaviour envir. = environment

↓ = less + = positive indiv. =individual org.= organism acc.= according dev.= development

sit. = situation/al -/neg. = negative ppl = people w/= with wo/= without char.= characteristics

inf.= information m= months y= years lvl= level betw.= between perf.= performance

var.= variable rel.= relationship var.= variable cond.= condition




CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH (1.2C- PB4)
-rel.: direction→ positive rel.- positive values (x > 0), tendency for 2 var. to change in the same
direction

→ negative rel.- negative values (x ‹ 0), tendency for 2 var. to change in the opposite
direction

: form→ linear- data points tend to cluster around a straight line (Pearson correlation)

→ monotonic- consistently positively/negatively one-directional (Spearman correlation)

: consistency & strength- consistency measured, described by numerical value obtained for a
correlation coefficient

-graphs- provide the opportunity to see the characteristics of a rel.

-research types→ correlational- demonstrates existence of a rel. (its strength) betw. 2 var. but
doesn’t explain it/determine causes/imply causation

- measuring 2 diff. var. for each indiv. (1 group w/2 scores for
indiv.)

- there is only observation, no interference

- envir. is not controlled (bc of confounding var.)

→ experimental- demonstrate cause-and-effect rel. betw. 2 var.

- requires manipulation of 1 var. to create conditions

- measures only 1 var., looks for diff. betw. 2/+ groups

→differential- establishes existence of rel. by demonstrating a diff. betw. 2 groups

-uses 1 var. to create groups, then measures the 2 nd var.

-correlation/correlation coefficient- numerical value that describes, measures the rel. betw. 2 var.
- +/- describe direction of the rel.

, - numerical value (0.0-1.0) describes strength, consistency, type
(Pearson/Spearman) indicates the form

-statistical significance- real rel. that exists in population, interprets the strength

-coefficient of determination- squared value of correlation (r2)

-measures % of variability in 1 var. predicted by the other var.

-prediction- using knowledge about 1 var. to help predict/explain the 2 nd var.

- regression- process of using 1 var. to predict another

-multiple regression- 1 var. can be explained by a set of others

- var.: predictor var.

: criterion var. (being explained/predicted)

-non-numerical scores: 1. one score numerical, the other non-numerical

-organize the score into separate groups

2. both non-numerical

-organize data in a matrix w/rows and columns

-reliability- consistency/stability of measurements

-validity- extent to which measures actually measure what they´re supposed to

-limitations→ 3rd var. problem- possibility of 3rd unknown var. controlling var. influencing the rel.

→ directionality- inability to determine which var. is the cause, which the effect

-causality- 1 event affects the other



MEETING 1
Passer CH1: Science and Psychology
-methods by which ppl hold beliefs:

→tenacity- believing something simply bc it is what we have long believed

→authority- relying on other ppl as our source of knowledge and beliefs

-when: we believe the person has expertise of the subject

: we perceive the person as trustworthy

→reason- use of logic/rational arguments to reach a conclusion (used by scientists to
construct theories, derive hypotheses to test theories)

, →empiricism- acquiring knowledge through observation, experience (all knowledge derived
from experience)

-confirmation/congeniality bias- tendency to seek inf. supporting our views,
avoiding disconfirming inf.

→science- systematically gathering and evaluating empirical evidence to answer questions,
test ideas

-relies on empirical evidence, reasoning

-scientists want to describe, explain, predict and control events

-variable- factor/attribute that can assume 2/+ values (can differ, change)

-description- involves dev. of coding systems, identifies things

-explanation→ hypothesis- proposition about the causes/outcomes of an event, how variables are
related (formed by reasoning)

→theory- set of formal statements specifying how/why variables are related

-broader than hypotheses

-causes: distal- remote causes

: proximal- immediate causes

-causal inference- to conclude that var. X had a causal effect on var. Y

: covariation- as X changes, Y changes

: temporal order- change in X occurs before the change in Y

: absence of plausible alternative explanations

-prediction- hypothesis/theory testing, applied prediction (if….then)

-2 var./events related→ using knowledge about 1 var. to make predictions about the other

-control- having an influence over research settings/procedures/application of scientific knowledge

-being able to decide what var. to study, know when to measure them

-applying scientific knowledge to improve lives

-assumptions: events are not random, they are regular/in pattern

: patterns have underlying causes

: causes are possible to discover

-empirical question/claim- can be tested through observation

-falsifiability- an assertion is testable if we can envision gathering some type of empirical evidence
that will reveal the assertion as false

-operationism- defining a concept in terms of the specific procedures used to represent it

-replication- process of repeating a study to determine whether the original findings will be upheld
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