Intro to Research Ch. 8
ordinal level of measurement
(rank ordered) ranked high to low or use of a rating scale. often uses numbers but can sometimes use traits
3 characteristics of ratio level measurement:
1. ability to arrange numbers in a continuum 2. ability to specify amount and differences between amounts 3. ability to identify an absolute zero relative to a characteristic
descriptive statistics
a way of summarizing data to convey the main info
frequency polygon
a way to examine the shape of your distribution
explain when a researcher would use each of the following: a. scatterplot b. column graph c. line graph
a. scatterplot- relationship between 2-3 continuous measures b. column graph- comparing magnitude of one or more variables c. line graph- depicting nonlinear relationships (interactions)
difference
actual range- highest score-lowest score
nominal level of measurement
aka naming level. researchers assign participants and their responses to a category
pie chart
appropriate for nominal, categorical measure. useful for percentages or proportions
mean
average
what descriptive statistics are used most often with nominal level measures?
categories
match the level of measurement with its brief description: ___nominal ___ordinal ___interval ___ratio a. rank order from highest to lowest b. shows how much particpants differ but no true 0 c. measures with a true 0 d. naming or mutually exclusive categories
d. nominal a. ordinal b. interval c. ratio
standard deviation
dispertion of scores around the mean. (find the mean then the amount between each score and the mean)
positive skew
distribution has an abnormally long tail that stretches in the positive direction (in regard to outliers)
negative skew
distribution that has an abnormally long tail that stretches in the negative direction (i regard to outliers)
variance
divide the sum of squares by the number of participants (standard deviation is the square root of variance)
proportion
dividing # for particular category b the total #, yielding a number between 0.0 and 1.0
percentage (%)
dividing the # participants/observations by total # of particpants then x 100
mutually exclusive category
each participant or instance of a behavior fits into only one category
exhaustive category
if every participant or every behavior under observation fits into a category
XY Scatterplot
illustrates the relationship between two sets of scores usually from the same participant
column and bar graphs
illustrating th magnitude or frequency of one or more variables
the scores obtained from articulation/phonology or language test most likely measure at what level?
interval
subjects of a study indicate where they live, which researcher classified by geographic regions. what scale of measurement would this be?
nominal
median
number that occurs at the midpoint
researchers classified preschool children's history of middle ear infections as frequent/moderate/infrequent based on the number of reported episodes. what scale of measurement would this be?
ordinal
what kind of chart or graph could you use if your level of measurement was nominal and you had percentages that totaled to 100%?
pie chart
sampling error
possibility that a random sample might yield an estimate of a population characteristic that is not perfectly accurate
interval level of measurement
provides info on which participants have higher or lower scores and how much they differ
what measure of validity is calculated by determining the difference between the minimum and maximum scores?
range
will an extreme, outlying score have a greater impact on the range or the standard deviation of a set of scores?
range
what level of measurement would allow you to say that a score of 30 was three times as much as a score of 10
ratio
margin of error
reflects the potential distribution of means
range
reporting the minimum and maximum scores
interquartile range
represents the difference of the scores at the 75th and 25th percentiles
ratio level of measurement
same as interval, only with a true zero. (often assessments of physical attributes)
mode
score that occurs most often
bimodal
scores that occur most often in a set
sum of squares
squaring the differences (standard deviation) to eliminate the negative numbers
normal distribution
the dispersion of scores around the mean is symmetrical and half of the scores fall above the mean and half fall below
sampling distribution
the potential distribution of means
outliers
the presence of scores that separate quite a bit form the other scores
what is the relationship between standard deviation and variance
the standard deviation is the square root of the variance
line graph
useful for illustrating different values for frequencies, counts, percentages, and averages
scatterplot
useful for illustrating the relationship between two and even three continuous measures.