Chi Square/T-test/ANOVA/Correlation
Spearman's Correlational Coefficient
1 or more variable that is ordinal OR intervental/ratio that is normally distributed
Mean
ANOVA test looks at the (mean, median or mode)
Chi-Square Test
Appropriate test when you are working with independent samples and outcome or dependent variable is nominal or ordinal level data
Mode
Chi Square test looks at the (mean, median or mode)
Pearson's Correlation Coefficient
Examines the relationship between 2 or more variables (interval/ratio); expressed as "r"
Difference between groups ___________________________ Difference within groups
F-ratio formula
b/t sum of squares divided by the df=mean square ___________________________________________________ w/in sum of squares divided by the df=mean square
How do you find F
Percent of variance
How much of a difference in the test grade is related to the amount I studied
Reject the null hypothesis
If alpha is greater than p, you would
McNemar's Test
If in a Chi-Square test, the sample is not independent use _______
The Fischer exact test
If one or more cells in a 2x2 Chi-square test table has less than 5 use _____
Yates Continuity Test
If one or more cells in a 2x2 Chi-square test table is greater than 5, but less than 10 use ____
1
If the F ratio is close to ____ it is UNLIKELY SIGNIFICANT
Condition 2
If the p-value is greater than alpha (p > .05), then we fail to reject the null hypothesis, and we say that the result is statistically nonsignificant (n.s.)
Fail to reject the null hypothesis
If the p-value is greater than alpha, you would
Condition 1
If the p-value is less than or equal to the alpha (p< .05), then we reject the null hypothesis, and we say the result is statistically significant.
Levene's Test
If two samples have equal variance (homogeneity of variance) what test should be used?
Dependent
Independent/Dependent T-test: which one produces a paired T-value and a corresponding P value
Meta-synthesis
Looks at multiple qualitative studies and compares them
0.3-0.5
Moderate relationship is ___
Chi Square
Nominal
Pearson's Correlational test
Normally distributed interval/ratio and samples greater than 50
p-value
Once the alpha level has been set, a statistic (like r) is computed. Each statistic has an associated probability value called a p-value, or the likelihood of an observed statistic occurring due to chance, given the sampling distribution
Correlational coefficients
One sample, at least 3 subjects, prefer more than 50 to address concerns
Population
Patient group
Systematic/Integrated reviews of research
Presents the states of the science, resolves conflicting reports, are directly applicable to practice
Carry-Over effect
Previous treatment continue to have an effect through next treatment
Randomized control trials
Randomly selected sample and randomly assigned subjects to treatment groups
Correlational coefficients
Shows relationship/association between variables
Null hypothesis
States that there is no relationship/association or difference between the study groups or samples
r
Strength of correlation is determined by the absolute value of __
>0.5
Strong relationship is__
Position effect
Subjects are exposed to more than one treatment over time, order of the treatment impacts the outcome
Mean
T-test looks at the (mean, median or mode)
One
T-test tests for significant differences between the means of 2 independent groups; of applied to more than 2 groups the risk of a Type ___ error increases
False
T/F: The ANOVA tells you where the difference is
True
T/F: the closer they are the more they are correlated
F ratio
Tells the extent to which the group's mean differs (between and within groups)
ANOVA
Test produces an F statistic and a corresponding p value
ANOVA
Test used for interval/ratio level of measurement for 3 or more groups
T-test
Test used when the measurement is ratio/interval, and only have two samples
Alternative Hypothesis
The alternative or experimental hypothesis reflects that there will be an observed effect for our experiment.
Decreasing
The closer you get to 0, corelational strength is _____
-1 to +1
The range for correlational
Wash out
Time you allow for one drug to run out and the next to get started
Repeat-measures ANOVA
Used for dependent samples and can be used to find a change over time in the dependent with exposure in the independent variable
<0.3
Weak relationship is ____
Larger
Weaker the relationship, the sample size needs to be ______
1. What were the results of the study 2. Validity 3. Reliability 4. Applicability 5. What is the magnitude of the effects 6 How precise are estimates of the effect 7. IS the evidence of side effects 8. What are the costs 9. IS there relevance to my clinical situation 10. Are there other studies with similar conclusions
What question to ask when you critically analyze data?
alpha
standard to meet for a researcher to claim that s/he has made a discovery of a real phenomenon
df of between groups: # of groups (K) -1 ___________________________________________ df of within groups: N - K Add the numerator and denominator
Degrees of freedom for ANOVA
df=N-2
Degrees of freedom for Pearsons
df= Sample size for both groups - 2
Degrees of freedom for a t-test
df= number of rows-1 X's number of columns-1
Degrees of freedom for the Chi-Square test
Percent of variance
Difference in the first variable from the second variable
r2 (coefficient of determinants) x100
Equation of percent of variance
Meta-analysis
better than systematic reviews (takes actual statistics on those combines it and does new statistics on those combined results) combine statistical results
