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The only thing I can think of is, "If A = B, and B=C, then A=C"....something like that.
Yes again. You're becoming quite the stats guru.
The stats is strong with this one.
Okay, a question for all you design experts:
How would you construct an experimental/causational study on whether technology-based relationships negatively affected mental health?
I know someone who wants to do this experiment (or would, if they had any free time at all, which they currently don't), and I honestly can't wrap my head around how you could measure that causationally. Any ideas?
Okay, a question for all you design experts:
How would you construct an experimental/causational study on whether technology-based relationships negatively affected mental health?
I know someone who wants to do this experiment (or would, if they had any free time at all, which they currently don't), and I honestly can't wrap my head around how you could measure that causationally. Any ideas?
I'm am somewhat lost on something for the research project we are doing for research methods course...
Without standard deviations and, ideally, ranges, you can't really say anything. If, for example, if whatever those means represent are on scales that range from -100 to 100, and each group has a standard deviation of 45, then the differences are inconsequential. If, on the other hand, the scales range from, say, 10 to 20, and the standard deviations are .2, then those differences are enormous.
If it's just a poor question and not a trick (or you were given but just didn't post the SDs), then I think your answer is correct.
looks to me like you're doing it correctly then.
I'm trying to study for the final in my research methods class but there is one subject that is pretty confusing.
I am reading a chapter about 2x2 factorial experiment. When it is talking about the "overall main effect" do they mean the average of the two main effects for an independent variable? And when they talk about "interactions" do they mean the difference between the two main effects in the same independent variable or is it the difference between the same manipulation across the two independent variables or is it when you look at the difference between all four main effects?
Here's a good site with systematic explanations of the differences between single main effects, two main effects, main effects and interactions, etc. Should answer your question about interactions. http://www.psychstat.missouristate.edu/multibook/mlt09m.html
Does the textbook use the words "overall main effect"? I don't ever recall hearing that before. Each IV would have a significant or nonsignificant main effect. Maybe it means the model intercept? But I think that's almost always significant and not super important...
Ahh, close but not quite.
"Levels" exist within each variable. Its a little confusing at first, but you get the hang of it.
The variable is the broader concept (e.g. Type of treatment). The level is just the specific value of that variable.
Here were, about ten months later, and I still don't have this totally down. However, this is a fairly simple question, so I don't feel too down.
Right now I am putting the final touches on my first research paper 🙂sleep🙂 and there is just one thing I am not clear on. The professor lectured on the basics of writing the paper in APA format and in my course notes, I wrote down that in the results section, for all of the statistical information you provide, the independent and dependent variable need to be specified. For example, if you have three correlations that need to be presented, you have to say "For the first correlation the independent variable was...and the dependent variable was....For the second correlation, the independent variable was.....and the dependent variable was......For the third correlation, the the independent variable was......and the dependent variable was....."
Is that the way it has to be done or are my notes incorrect and is that unnecessary?
It doesn't have to be done that way. But if the prof wants you to do it, it might be more as a demonstration that you know which is which, so if the prof said to do it I'd just do it, in case it's on the grading checklist.