© aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different 1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean...

56
© aSup-2007 1 Inference about Means and Mean Different PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different

Transcript of © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different 1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean...

Page 1: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 1

Inference about Means and Mean Different

PART IIIInference about

Means and Mean Different

Page 2: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 2

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Chapter 8INTRODUCTION TO

HYPOTHESIS TESTING

Page 3: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 3

Inference about Means and Mean Different The Logic of Hypothesis

Testing It usually is impossible or impractical for

a researcher to observe every individual in a population

Therefore, researchers usually collect data from a sample and then use the sample data to answer question about the population

Hypothesis testing is statistical method that uses sample data to evaluate a hypothesis about the population

Page 4: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 4

Inference about Means and Mean Different The Hypothesis Testing

Procedure1.State a hypothesis about population, usually

the hypothesis concerns the value of a population parameter

2.Before we select a sample, we use hypothesis to predict the characteristics that the sample have. The sample should be similar to the population

3.We obtain a sample from the population (sampling)

4.We compare the obtain sample data with the prediction that was made from the hypothesis

Page 5: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 5

Inference about Means and Mean Different PROCESS OF HYPOTHESIS

TESTING It assumed that the parameter μ is known for the population before treatment

The purpose of the experiment is to determine whether or not the treatment has an effect on the population mean

Known population before treatment

μ = 30

TREATMENT

Unknown population after treatment

μ = ?

Page 6: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 6

Inference about Means and Mean Different

EXAMPLE It is known from national health statistics

that the mean weight for 2-year-old children is μ = 26 pounds and σ = 4 pounds

The researcher’s plan is to obtain a sample of n = 16 newborn infants and give their parents detailed instruction for giving their children increased handling and stimulation

NOTICE that the population after treatment is unknown

Page 7: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 7

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-1: State the Hypothesis H0 : μ = 26 (even with extra

handling, the mean at 2 years is still 26 pounds)

H1 : μ ≠ 26 (with extra handling, the mean at 2 years will be different from 26 pounds)

Example we use α = .05 two tail

Page 8: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 8

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-2: Set the Criteria for a Decision Sample means that are likely to be

obtained if H0 is true; that is, sample means that are close to the null hypothesis

Sample means that are very unlikely to be obtained if H0 is false; that is, sample means that are very different from the null hypothesis

The alpha level or the significant level is a probability value that is used to define the very unlikely sample outcomes if the null hypothesis is true

Page 9: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 9

Inference about Means and Mean Different The location of the critical region boundaries for three

different los

-1.96 1.96-2.58 2.58

-3.30 3.30

α = .05α = .01α = .001

Page 10: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 10

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-3: Collect Data and

Compute Sample Statistics

After obtain the sample data, summarize the appropriate statistic

σM = σ√n

z =M - μ

σM

NOTICE that the top f the z-scores

formula measures how much difference there is between the data and the hypothesis

The bottom of the formula measures standard distances that ought to exist between the sample mean and the population mean

Page 11: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 11

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-4: Make a Decision Whenever the sample data fall in the

critical region then reject the null hypothesis

It’s indicate there is a big discrepancy between the sample and the null hypothesis (the sample is in the extreme tail of the distribution)

Page 12: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 12

Inference about Means and Mean Different

HYPOTHESIS TEST WITH z A standardized test that are normally

distributed with μ = 65 and σ = 15. The researcher suspect that special training in reading skills will produce a change in scores for individuals in the population. A sample of n = 25 individual is selected, the average for this sample is M = 70.

Is there evidence that the training has an effect on test score?

LEARNING CHECK

Page 13: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 13

Inference about Means and Mean Different

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE A HYPOTHESIS TEST

The size of difference between the sample mean and the original population mean

The variability of the scores, which is measured by either the standard deviation or the variance

The number of score in the sample

σM = σ√n

z =M - μ

σM

Page 14: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 14

Inference about Means and Mean Different

DIRECTIONAL (ONE-TAILED) HYPOTHESIS TESTS

Usually a researcher begin an experiment with a specific prediction about the direction of the treatment effect

For example, a special training program is expected to increase student performance

In this situation, it possible to state the statistical hypothesis in a manner that incorporates the directional prediction into the statement of H0 and H1

Page 15: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 15

Inference about Means and Mean Different

A psychologist has developed a standardized test for measuring the vocabulary skills of 4-year-old children. The score on the test form a normal distribution with μ = 60 and σ = 10.

A researcher would like to use this test to investigate the hypothesis that children who grow up as an only child develop vocabulary skills at a different rate than children in large family. A sample of n = 25 only children is obtained, and the mean test score for this sample is M = 63.

LEARNING CHECK

Page 16: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 16

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Chapter 9INTRODUCTION TO t STATISTIC

Page 17: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 17

Inference about Means and Mean Different

THE t STATISTIC:AN ALTERNATIVE TO z

In the previous chapter, we presented the statistical procedure that permit researcher to use sample mean to test hypothesis about an unknown population

Remember that the expected value of the distribution of sample means is μ, the population mean

Page 18: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 18

Inference about Means and Mean Different

The statistical procedure were based on a few basic concepts:

1. A sample mean (M) is expected more or less to approximate its population mean (μ). This permits us to use sample mean to test a hypothesis about the population mean.

2. The standard error provide a measure of how well a sample mean approximates the population mean. Specially, the standard error determines how much difference between M and μ is reasonable to expect just by chance.

Page 19: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 19

Inference about Means and Mean Different

The statistical procedure were based on a few basic concepts:

3. To quantify our inferences about the population, we compare the obtained sample mean (M) with the hypothesized population mean (μ) by computing a z-score test statistic

Page 20: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 20

Inference about Means and Mean Different

THE t STATISTIC:AN ALTERNATIVE TO z

The goal of the hypothesis test is to determine whether or not the obtained

result is significantly greater than would be expected by chance.

Page 21: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 21

Inference about Means and Mean Different

THE PROBLEM WITH z-SCORE A z-score requires that we know the

value of the population standard deviation (or variance), which is needed to compute the standard error

In most situation, however, the standard deviation for the population is not known

In this case, we cannot compute the standard error and z-score for hypothesis test. We use t statistic for hypothesis testing when the population standard deviation is unknown

Page 22: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 22

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Introducing t Statistic

σM =σ√n

Now we will estimates the standard error by simply substituting the sample variance or standard deviation in place of the unknown population value

SM =s√n

Notice that the symbol for estimated standard error of M is SM instead of

σM , indicating that the estimated value is computed from sample data rather than from the actual population parameter

Page 23: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 23

Inference about Means and Mean Different

z-score and t statistic

σM = σ√n

z =M - μ

σM

SM = s√n

t =M - μ

SM

Page 24: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 24

Inference about Means and Mean Different

The t Distribution Every sample from a population can be

used to compute a z-score or a statistic If you select all possible samples of a

particular size (n), then the entire set of resulting z-scores will form a z-score distribution

In the same way, the set of all possible t statistic will form a t distribution

Page 25: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 25

Inference about Means and Mean Different

The Shape of the t Distribution The exact shape of a t distribution

changes with degree of freedom There is a different sampling

distribution of t (a distribution of all possible sample t values) for each possible number of degrees of freedom

As df gets very large, then t distribution gets closer in shape to a normal z-score distribution

Page 26: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 26

Inference about Means and Mean Different HYPOTHESIS TESTS WITH t

STATISTIC The goal is to use a sample from the

treated population (a treated sample) as the determining whether or not the treatment has any effectKnown population before treatment

Unknown population after treatment

μ = 30 μ = ?

TREATMENT

Page 27: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 27

Inference about Means and Mean Different HYPOTHESIS TESTS WITH t

STATISTIC As always, the null hypothesis states that the

treatment has no effect; specifically H0 states that the population mean is unchanged

The sample data provides a specific value for the sample mean; the variance and estimated standard error are computed

t =sample mean

(from data)

Estimated standard error (computed from the sample data)

population mean (hypothesized from H0)-

Page 28: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 28

Inference about Means and Mean Different

A psychologist has prepared an “Optimism Test” that is administered yearly to graduating college seniors. The test measures how each graduating class feels about it future. The higher the score, the more optimistic the class. Last year’s class had a mean score of μ = 19. a sample of n = 9 seniors from this years class was selected and tested. The scores for these seniors are as follow:

19 24 23 27 19 20 27 21 18On the basis of this sample, can the psychologist

conclude that this year’s class has a different level of optimism than last year’s class?

LEARNING CHECK

Page 29: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 29

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-1: State the Hypothesis, and select an alpha level

H0 : μ = 19 (there is no change)

H1 : μ ≠ 19 (this year’s mean is different)

Example we use α = .05 two tail

Page 30: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 30

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-2: Locate the critical region Remember that for hypothesis test with t

statistic, we must consult the t distribution table to find the critical t value. With a sample of n = 9 students, the t statistic will have degrees of freedom equal to

df = n – 1 = 9 – 1 = 8 For a two tailed test with α = .05 and df =

8, the critical values are t = ± 2.306. The obtained t value must be more extreme than either of these critical values to reject H0

Page 31: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 31

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-3: Obtain the sample data,

and compute the test statistic

Find the sample mean

Find the sample variances

Find the estimated standard error SM

Find the t statistic

SM = s√n

t =M - μ

SM

Page 32: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 32

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-4: Make a decision about H0, and state conclusion

The obtained t statistic (t = -4.39) is in the critical region. Thus our sample data are unusual enough to reject the null hypothesis at the .05 level of significance.

We can conclude that there is a significant difference in level of optimism between this year’s and last year’s graduating classes

t(8) = -4.39, p<.05, two tailed

Page 33: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 33

Inference about Means and Mean Different The critical region in the

t distribution for α = .05 and df = 8

Reject H0 Reject H0

Fail to reject H0

-2.306 2.306

Page 34: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 34

Inference about Means and Mean Different

DIRECTIONAL HYPOTHESES AND ONE-TAILED TEST

The non directional (two-tailed) test is more commonly used than the directional (one-tailed) alternative

On other hand, a directional test may be used in some research situations, such as exploratory investigation or pilot studies or when there is a priori justification (for example, a theory previous findings)

Page 35: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 35

Inference about Means and Mean Different

A fund raiser for a charitable organization has set a goal of averaging at least $ 25 per donation. To see if the goal is being met, a random sample of

recent donation is selected.The data for this sample are as follows:20 50 30 25 15 20 40 50 10 20

LEARNING CHECK

Page 36: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 36

Inference about Means and Mean Different The critical region in the

t distribution for α = .05 and df = 9

Reject H0

Fail to reject H0

1.883

Page 37: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 37

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Chapter 10THE t TEST FOR TWO

INDEPENDENT SAMPLES

Page 38: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 38

Inference about Means and Mean Different

OVERVIEW Single sample techniques are used

occasionally in real research, most research studies require the comparison of two (or more) sets of data

There are two general research strategies that can be used to obtain of the two sets of data to be compared:○ The two sets of data come from the two

completely separate samples (independent-measures or between-subjects design)

○ The two sets of data could both come from the same sample (repeated-measures or within subject design)

Page 39: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 39

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Do the achievement scores for students taught by method A differ from the scores for students taught by method B?In statistical terms, are the two population means the same or different?

Unknownµ =?

SampleA

Unknownµ =?

SampleB

Taught by Method A

Taught by Method B

Page 40: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 40

Inference about Means and Mean Different

THE HYPOTHESES FOR AN INDEPENDENT-MEASURES TEST

The goal of an independent-measures research study is to evaluate the mean difference between two population (or between two treatment conditions)

H0: µ1 - µ2 = 0 (No difference between the population means)

H1: µ1 - µ2 ≠ 0 (There is a mean difference)

Page 41: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 41

Inference about Means and Mean Different THE FORMULA FOR AN INDEPENDENT-MEASURES

HYPOTHESIS TEST

In this formula, the value of M1 – M2 is obtained from the sample data and the value for µ1 - µ2 comes from the null hypothesis

The null hypothesis sets the population mean different equal to zero, so the independent-measures t formula can be simplifier further

t =sample mean

difference

estimated standard error

population mean difference-

=M1 – M2

S (M1 – M2)

Page 42: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 42

Inference about Means and Mean Different

THE STANDARD ERROR

To develop the formula for S(M1 – M2) we will consider the following points:

Each of the two sample means represent its own population mean, but in each case there is some error

SM = s2

n√SM1-M2 = s1

2

n1√s2

2

n2+

Page 43: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 43

Inference about Means and Mean Different

POOLED VARIANCE The standard error is limited to

situation in which the two samples are exactly the same size (that is n1 – n2)

In situations in which the two sample size are different, the formula is biased and, therefore, inappropriate

The bias come from the fact that the formula treats the two sample variance

Page 44: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 44

Inference about Means and Mean Different

POOLED VARIANCE for the independent-measure t

statistic, there are two SS values and two df values)

SP2 = SS

nSM1-M2 = s1

2

n1√s2

2

n2+

Page 45: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 45

Inference about Means and Mean Different HYPOTHESIS TEST WITH THE INDEPENDENT-MEASURES t

STATISTICIn a study of jury behavior, two samples of participants were provided details about a trial in which the defendant was obviously

guilty. Although Group-2 received the same details as Group-1, the second group was also

told that some evidence had been withheld from the jury by the judge. Later participants were asked to recommend a jail sentence. The length of term suggested by each participant is presented. Is there a significant difference between the two groups in their responses?

Page 46: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 46

Inference about Means and Mean Different THE LENGTH OF TERM SUGGESTED BY EACH

PARTICIPANTGroup-1 scores: 4 4 3 2 5 1 1 4Group-2 scores: 3 7 8 5 4 7 6 8

There are two separate samples in this study. Therefore the analysis will use the independent-measure t test

Page 47: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 47

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-1: State the Hypothesis, and select an alpha level

H0 : μ1 - μ2 = 0 (for the population, knowing evidence has been withheld has no effect on the suggested sentence)

H1 : μ1 - μ2 ≠ 0 (for the population, knowledge of withheld evidence has an effect on the jury’s response)

We will set α = .05 two tail

Page 48: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 48

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-2: Identify the critical region For the independent-measure t statistic,

degrees of freedom are determined bydf = n1 + n2 – 2 = 8 + 8 – 2 = 14

The t distribution table is consulted, for a two tailed test with α = .05 and df = 14, the critical values are t = ± 2.145.

The obtained t value must be more extreme than either of these critical values to reject H0

Page 49: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 49

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-3: Compute the test

statistic Find the sample mean for each group

M1 = 3 and M2 = 6

Find the SS for each groupSS1 = 16 and SS2 = 24

Find the pooled variance, andSP

2 = 2.86

Find estimated standard errorS(M1-M2) = 0.85

Page 50: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 50

Inference about Means and Mean Different STEP-3: Compute the t

statistic

t = M1 – M2

S (M1 – M2)

=-3

0.85= -3.53

Page 51: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 51

Inference about Means and Mean Different

STEP-4: Make a decision about H0, and state conclusion

The obtained t statistic (t = -3.53) is in the critical region on the left tail (critical t = ± 2.145). Therefore, the null hypothesis is rejected.

The participants that were informed about the withheld evidence gave significantly longer sentences,

t(14) = -3.53, p<.05, two tails

Page 52: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 52

Inference about Means and Mean Different The critical region in the

t distribution for α = .05 and df = 14

Reject H0 Reject H0

Fail to reject H0

-2.145 2.145

Page 53: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 53

Inference about Means and Mean Different LEARNING

CHECKThe following data are from two separate independent-measures experiments. Without doing any calculation, which experiment is more likely to demonstrate a significant difference between treatment A and B? Explain your answer.

EXPERIMENT A EXPERIMENT BTreatment

ATreatment

BTreatment

ATreatment

B

n = 10 n = 10 n = 10 n = 10M = 42 M = 52 M = 61 M = 71

SS = 180 SS = 120 SS = 986 SS = 1042

Page 54: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 54

Inference about Means and Mean Different

A psychologist studying human memory, would like to examine the process of

forgetting. One group of participants is required to memorize a list of words in the evening just before going to bed.

Their recall is tested 10 hours latter in the morning. Participants in the second group memorized the same list of words in he morning, and then their memories tested 10 hours later after being awake

all day.

LEARNING CHECK

Page 55: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 55

Inference about Means and Mean Different LEARNING

CHECKThe psychologist hypothesizes that there will be less forgetting during less forgetting during sleep than a busy day. The recall scores for two samples of college students are follows:

Asleep Scores Awake Scores

15 13 14 14 15 13 14 12

16 15 16 15 14 13 11 12

16 15 17 14 13 13 12 14

Page 56: © aSup-2007 Inference about Means and Mean Different   1 PART III Inference about Means and Mean Different.

© aSup-2007 56

Inference about Means and Mean Different

Sketch a frequency distribution for the ‘asleep’ group. On the same graph (in different color), sketch the distribution for the ‘awake’ group.Just by looking at these two distributions, would you predict a significant differences between two treatment conditions?

Use the independent-measures t statistic to determines whether there is a significant difference between the treatments. Conduct the test with α = .05

LEARNING CHECK