Reporting Results in APA Format UW - Edu
Reporting Results in APA Format UW - Edu
Reporting Results in APA Format UW - Edu
The goal of the results section in an empirical paper is to report the results of the data analysis used to test a
hypothesis. The results section should be in condensed format and lacking interpretation. Avoid discussing why
or how the experiment was performed or alluding to whether your results are good or bad, expected or
unexpected, interesting or uninteresting. This document is specifically about how to report statistical results.
Refer to our handout Writing an APA Empirical (lab) Report for details on writing a results section.
Every statistical test that you report should relate directly to a hypothesis. Begin the results section by restating
each hypothesis, then state whether your results supported it, then give the data and statistics that allowed you to
draw this conclusion.
If you have multiple numerical results to report, its often a good idea to present them in a figure (graph) or a
table (see our handout on APA table guidelines).
In reporting the results of statistical tests, report the descriptive statistics, such as means and standard deviations,
as well as the test statistic, degrees of freedom, obtained value of the test, and the probability of the result
occurring by chance (p value). Test statistics and p values should be rounded to two decimal places. All
statistical symbols that are not Greek letters should be italicized (M, SD, N, t, p, etc.).
When reporting a significant difference between two conditions, indicate the direction of this difference, i.e.
which condition was more/less/higher/lower than the other condition(s). Assume that your audience has a
professional knowledge of statistics. Dont explain how or why you used a certain test unless it is unusual.
p values
There are two ways to report p values. One way is to use the alpha level (the a priori criterion for the
probablility of falsely rejecting your null hypothesis), which is typically .05 or .01. Example: F(1, 24) = 44.4, p
< .01. You may also report the exact p value (the a posteriori probability that the result that you obtained, or one
more extreme, occurred by chance). Example: t(33) = 2.10, p = .03. If your exact p value is less than .001, it is
conventional to state merely p < .001. If you report exact p values, state early in the results section the alpha
level used as a significance criterion for your tests. Example: We used an alpha level of .05 for all statistical
tests.
EXAMPLES
Over a two-day period, participants drank significantly fewer drinks in the experimental group (M= 0.667, SD =
1.15) than did those in the wait-list control group (M= 8.00, SD= 2.00), t(4) = -5.51, p=.005.
The main effect of message discrepancy yielded an F ratio of F(1, 24) = 44.4, p < .001, indicating that the mean
change score was significantly greater for large-discrepancy messages (M = 4.78, SD = 1.99) than for small-
discrepancy messages (M = 2.17, SD = 1.25). The main effect of source expertise yielded an F ratio of F(1, 24)
= 25.4, p < .01, indicating that the mean change score was significantly higher in the high-expertise message
source (M = 5.49, SD = 2.25) than in the low-expertise message source (M = 0.88, SD = 1.21). The interaction
effect was non-significant, F(1, 24) = 1.22, p > .05.
Thanks to Laura Little, Ph.D., UW Department of Psychology, for providing the examples reported here.