PSYCH 2317 Ch. 12 MindTap
post hoc test
additional hypothesis test done after an ANOVA to determine whether mean differences are significant
distribution of F-ratios
all possible F values that can be obtained when the null hypothesis is true
mean square
average of the squared deviations
treatment effect
cause of differences between treatments
pairwise comparison
comparison of individual treatments two at a time
total
entire set of scores
k-1
formula for between-treatments degrees of freedom
SS total- SS within
formula for between-treatments sum of squares
N-1
formula for total degrees of freedom
EX^2-G^2/N
formula for total sum of squares
E(n-1)=Edf in each treatment
formula for within-treatments degrees of freedom
ESS inside each treatment
formula for within-treatments sum of squares
level
individual condition or value that makes up a variable
error term
measure of the variance caused by random, unsystematic differences
eta squared
percentage of variance accounted for by the treatment effect in published reports of ANOVA results
two-factor design or a factorial design
study that combines two variables
single-factor design
study that has only one independent variable
F-ratio
comparison between how much difference exists versus how big the differences are between treatment conditions
Tukey's HSD test
computation of single value that determines the minimum difference between treatment means necessary for significance
ANOVA summary table
diagram showing the source of variability
analysis of variance (ANOVA)
hypothesis-testing procedure used to evaluate mean differences between two or more treatments or populations
between-treatments variance
measure of how much difference exists between treatment conditions
within-treatments variance
measure of how much difference exists inside each treatment condition
Scheffé test
method using an F-ratio to evaluate the significance of the difference between two treatment conditions
testwise alpha level
risk of a Type I error for an individual hypothesis test
between-treatments
term referring to differences from one condition to another
within-treatments
term referring to differences that exist inside the individual conditions
experimentwise alpha level
total probability of a Type I error accumulated from all individual tests in the experiment
factor
variable that designates the groups being compared