Chapter 4: Making Inferences - Confidence Limits and Statistical Significance

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24 Terms

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Standard Error

the name given to the standard deviation of the sampling distribution

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Probability

always goes from 0 to 1

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Probability

is counter-intuitive

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Probability

it is counter-intuitive because we like to believe that we know things rather than making probability statements about them

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Null Hypothesis

symbolized by Hₒ.

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Null Hypothesis

logical counterpart of the alternative hypothesis

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Null Hypothesis

it either specifies that there is no effect, or that there is real effect in the direction opposite to that specified by the alternative hypothesis

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Alternative Hypothesis

symbolized by H₁.

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Alternative Hypothesis

the hypothesis that claims the differences in results between the conditions is due to the independent variable

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One-tailed (or directional) hypothesis

if we are looking for a result in one direction only

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Two-tailed (or non-directional) hypothesis

if we are looking for a result in either direection

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a-value or level of significance

value or cut-off we use before we decide to reject the null hypothesis

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probability value (p-value)

probability of a result occurring if the null hypothesis is true, not the probability that the null hypothesis is true

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0.05 (1 in 20 or 5%)

somewhat arbitrary, but is the convention that is used throughout much of science

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Statistically significant

when the probability is found to be below 0.05 (or whatever cut-off we are using)

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Statistical Significance

determining how likely it is that the result could have occurred by chance

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Statistical Significance

the probability that the pattern of data that was observed did not occur by chance

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Alpha level

indicates that the probability that the observed finding occurred by chance is less than 5 in 100

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statistically significant result

does not necessarily have to be "meaning", and is not necessarily "important", it just means that there is a less than 1 in 20 probability that the results would have occurred if the null hypothesis were correct

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Type I Error

when we reject the null hypothesis because there is only a low probability of the result occurring if it is true, but it might actually be true after all

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Type II Error

the other logical error when we fail to reject the null hypothesis when it is not true

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Confidence Intervals

the range of values which are the likely range of the population value

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Confidence Limits

the largest and the smallest values in the interval

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Degrees of Freedom or df

the number of scores that are free to vary in calculating a statistic