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SHORT SUMMARY ARM D&H

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A brief summary. Does not contain a detailed explanation of the substance, but serves more as a common thread. Useful for making flashcards. Clear and contains mainly keywords. This summary does NOT include statistical formulas.

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January 25, 2024
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APPLIED RESEARCH METHODS: D&H


Lecture 1 – a power primer (Cohen, 1992)

Power: the probability that a test rejects H0 and H1 is true.
Type 1 error: rejecting H0 when it should not have been rejected.
Type 2 error: not rejecting H0 when it should have been rejected.
 When power increases, chance of type 2 error decreases.

Beta: probability of making a type 2 error.

The mean power to detect medium effect sizes: .48

Fisherian null hypothesis: clear yes or no decision-making with probability level of p=0.05


Why does research often ignore the power analysis?
 Low level of consciousness about effect size.
 Only the statistical test result with p-value is looked at.
 Reference material for power analysis is too complicated.

The 4 variables of statistical inference:
 Sample size (N)
 Significance criteria (alpha)
 Population effect size (ES)
 Statistical power

Sample size (N)
 Number of participants for study.
 Larger sample size = more certainty in results.
 If you expect a big difference, you can use a smaller sample size.

Significance criteria (alpha)
 The rule to decide how sure we want to be before claiming something is true.
 Alpha set at 0.05  5% chance of being wrong is accepted.
 If a study examines multiple things, 0.01 could be used.

Population effect size (ES)
 The size of a real difference.
 Most difficult part of analyses.
 Low level of consciousness about the magnitude phenomena: to estimate how big or
small the difference is.
 Neyman-Pearson method: the degree to which H0 is false, indicated by the
discrepancy between H0 and H1.
 H0 = ES: 0

, What is a small ES?
d= .20

What is a medium ES?
d= .50

What is a large ES?
d= .80

Statistical power
 The test’s long-term ability to correctly detect a true difference or effect.
 Other terms: the likelihood of saying there is an effect when there really is one.
 Power = 1-beta: correctly rejecting a false hypothesis.
 Example: power of test is 80% = 80% chance that the test will correctly identify a real
difference of effect.

What does it mean when the power of a test is too low?
There’s a high risk of missing true effects.

What does it mean when the power of a test is too high?
The test might require more resources than is available.

What is the suggested power level and why?
80% because this strikes a balance between the risks of type 1 and type 2 errors.

Statistical tests
 T-test for difference between two independent means.
o df = 2(N-1).
 T-test for significance of a product moment correlation coefficient r
o df = N-2.
 Difference between two independent r’s
o Fisher z transformation of r.
 Binomial distribution/large curve test (for large samples).
o Population proportion (P) = .50.
o Also used in nonparametric significance test for differences between paired
observations
 Normal curve test for the difference between two independent proportions.
o Arcsine transformation Φ.
o Results are the same when the test is using chi-square with df = 1.
 Chi-square test for goodness of fit or association (one way) with two-way
contingency tables
o Goodness-of-fit: df = k-1.
o Contingency tables: df = (a-1) (b-1).
 One way analysis of variance.
o df = g-1.

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