100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

SJSU Final Exam Bio 155/55 Questions With Answers Graded A+ Assured Success

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
6
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
06-10-2024
Written in
2024/2025

Is Alpha = 0.05 meaningful? - ️️-Depends on how you look at it -It seems like a rational number and it works, but we can adjust it depending on what we are looking for. -Medically, we may be wanting a p value of 0.01 in order to have most accurate results -For ecology, we may change the p value to 0.1 -For many statisticians it is valuable, and they use it as a determining factor of wether or not they want to publish their data. -The problem with this is that a lot of the time scientist repeat experiments due to unpublished negative findings -Another outlook is that p value was meant to be a first look of findings Since many scientists see p value as meaningful, they stop their studies when they get negative results even if there is a correlation. R.A Fishcher meant for it to be more of a first look at your findings -Many statisticians in the community have began no longer using a p value for the reasons listed above, and therefore the alpha can be meaningful, it varies from statistician to statistician, along with the field of work. Relative Risk: - ️️-Aka risk ratio -Ratio of risks for 2 groups -RR = (risk of intervention group/risk for reference group) -RR = 1 means risk is the same -RR > 1 patients with paclovid are more likely to be hospitalized than placebo -RR<1 patients with paxlovid less likely to get hospitalized than placebo Relative Risk reduction (RRR): - ️️-proportionate reduction in risk for the intervention group relative to refrence group -RRR = ( risk for reference group - risk for intervention -group / risk for refrence group ) x 100 -Interpretation example: RRR= 88.8837%, paxlovid groups risk of HOD is reduced by 88.9% relative to the placebo group -Reference = placebo group -Intervention = paxlovid How was alpha =0.05 determined? - ️️-R.A. Fisher wrote a book in 1925 he put statistical tables used to determine statistical significance -Needed a separate table for each df which was too many -He chose alpha= 0.05 -Is arbitrary, feels reasonable, it works, socially accepted -intended as a first look -If alpha = 0.02 that means there is a 2% chance of making a type one error. Decreasing type one error we increase the chance of a type two error ( missing significant findings )Using Alpha and Null Hypothesis significance Testing( NHST) - ️️-Caused by the pvalue there is dichotomy( 2 outcomes ) which are significant p< alpha and non significant p> alpha -Significant also called positive findings ( most published) -non significant also called negative findings (put in the file drawer) 2 x 2 Table - ️️2 variables: -1 variable: treatment/ Intervention/ Factor -2nd variable: outcome/ Event There are frequencies analyzed in a 2 x 2 contingency table Risk - ️️-Probability an event will occur -Risk in one group: # of individuals with the outcome/ total # of individuals in that group

Show more Read less
Institution
SJSU Bio 155/55
Course
SJSU Bio 155/55









Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
SJSU Bio 155/55
Course
SJSU Bio 155/55

Document information

Uploaded on
October 6, 2024
Number of pages
6
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Content preview

SJSU Final Exam Bio 155/55
Is Alpha = 0.05 meaningful? - ✔️✔️-Depends on how you look at it
-It seems like a rational number and it works, but we can adjust it depending on what we
are looking for.
-Medically, we may be wanting a p value of 0.01 in order to have most accurate results
-For ecology, we may change the p value to 0.1
-For many statisticians it is valuable, and they use it as a determining factor of wether or
not they want to publish their data.
-The problem with this is that a lot of the time scientist repeat experiments due to
unpublished negative findings
-Another outlook is that p value was meant to be a first look of findings
Since many scientists see p value as meaningful, they stop their studies when they get
negative results even if there is a correlation. R.A Fishcher meant for it to be more of a
first look at your findings
-Many statisticians in the community have began no longer using a p value for the
reasons listed above, and therefore the alpha can be meaningful, it varies from
statistician to statistician, along with the field of work.


Relative Risk: - ✔️✔️-Aka risk ratio
-Ratio of risks for 2 groups
-RR = (risk of intervention group/risk for reference group)
-RR = 1 means risk is the same
-RR > 1 patients with paclovid are more likely to be hospitalized than placebo
-RR<1 patients with paxlovid less likely to get hospitalized than placebo

Relative Risk reduction (RRR): - ✔️✔️-proportionate reduction in risk for the
intervention group relative to refrence group
-RRR = ( risk for reference group - risk for intervention -group / risk for refrence group )
x 100
-Interpretation example: RRR= 88.8837%, paxlovid groups risk of HOD is reduced by
88.9% relative to the placebo group
-Reference = placebo group
-Intervention = paxlovid

How was alpha =0.05 determined? - ✔️✔️-R.A. Fisher wrote a book in 1925 he put
statistical tables used to determine statistical significance
-Needed a separate table for each df which was too many
-He chose alpha= 0.05
-Is arbitrary, feels reasonable, it works, socially accepted
-intended as a first look
-If alpha = 0.02 that means there is a 2% chance of making a type one error.
Decreasing type one error we increase the chance of a type two error ( missing
significant findings )

, Using Alpha and Null Hypothesis significance Testing( NHST) - ✔️✔️-Caused by the p-
value there is dichotomy( 2 outcomes ) which are significant p< alpha and non
significant p> alpha
-Significant also called positive findings ( most published)
-non significant also called negative findings (put in the file drawer)

2 x 2 Table - ✔️✔️2 variables:
-1 variable: treatment/ Intervention/ Factor
-2nd variable: outcome/ Event
There are frequencies analyzed in a 2 x 2 contingency table

Risk - ✔️✔️-Probability an event will occur
-Risk in one group: # of individuals with the outcome/ total # of individuals in that group

Importance of negative findings - ✔️✔️-In scientific knowledge they are important
-Scientists may repeat studies because they may not know about the unpublished
studies (negative findings usually dont get published)
-They are scientifically significant

Publication Bias: - ✔️✔️positive findings are more likely to be published (95%)


P-hacking - ✔️✔️-When a statistician is trying to get positive results they add or take
away data to get the positive results they want.
-This makes the data no longer accurate/ should no longer be published ( not
meaningful)
-Therefore focusing on p values makes us ignore trends that are still important
-The trend could also possibly be due to chance
-Managing data can be p-hacking depending on the study
biased

Why is focusing on p-values problematic? - ✔️✔️-Scientific significance/significance
meaning ( + results wanting to be published, there is still knowledge to be learned even
if it is a negative finding) losing sight of scientific knowledge and significance
-Contribution to science
-What knowledge we gain from it
-Can look over some relationships and effects
-Arbitrary
-intended for first look, it wasn't meant for it to be determining factor

Solutions - ✔️✔️-Look at the scientific significance
-Look at how it contributes to the field
-Meaning of the results
-Look at trends

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
PatrickKaylian Delaware State University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1820
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
1044
Documents
22126
Last sold
1 day ago

3.8

317 reviews

5
147
4
60
3
54
2
16
1
40

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions