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Lecture 1 Notes

This document provides an overview of statistics including definitions, purposes, key terms, and types. It discusses that statistics is useful for research, exams, assessing scientific studies, and various careers. It also notes that our brain processes information statistically and can be analyzed using statistical principles. Descriptive statistics summarize and organize data, while inferential statistics allow generalizing from samples to populations. The document defines important statistical concepts like populations, samples, variables, data, parameters, statistics, and sampling error. It also distinguishes between descriptive and inferential statistics, and different types of variables and scales of measurement. Finally, it reviews common research methods like descriptive research, correlational research, and experimental research.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views6 pages

Lecture 1 Notes

This document provides an overview of statistics including definitions, purposes, key terms, and types. It discusses that statistics is useful for research, exams, assessing scientific studies, and various careers. It also notes that our brain processes information statistically and can be analyzed using statistical principles. Descriptive statistics summarize and organize data, while inferential statistics allow generalizing from samples to populations. The document defines important statistical concepts like populations, samples, variables, data, parameters, statistics, and sampling error. It also distinguishes between descriptive and inferential statistics, and different types of variables and scales of measurement. Finally, it reviews common research methods like descriptive research, correlational research, and experimental research.

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Serena
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Statistics

 
Def.: "set of mathematical procedures for organizing, summarizing, and interpreting information"
 
What's it good for?
 To pass the exam
 For your research project/thesis
 To assess the quality of scientific studies
 If you want to work in research
 Our brain is a true statistics machine
o Apart from a few "programmed" needs/reflexes, everything we think and
perceive is shaped by statistical processes.
o Brain learned over many "samples" to interpret visual input statistical
relationships.
Statistics: What is it good for?
 Understanding statistical principles can therefore help us understand human thinking, to
formalize it and analyze it objectively.
 This can also show us how "statistically errors" can lead to distorted representations of
reality and potential misjudgments.
 Statistics are used to predict important outcomes and make decisions about things in
every day life
o Weather
o Political elections
o How likely you are to wreck your car
 
♡ SOME BASIC TERMS ♡
 
Population: Entire group of individuals is called the population.
 
Sample: A smaller group selected from the population.
 
*sometimes not able to test the entire population, so instead calculate from sample to come to
conclusions about population.
 
Variable: A characteristic or condition that can change or take on different values.
 
Data (pl.): The measurements obtained in a research study are called the data.
 
 
DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS
 
They are methods for organizing and summarizing data.
A descriptive value for a population is called a parameter and a descriptive value for a sample is
called a statistic.
 
Example:
 
244/404 students filled out the survey. (sample of the population, so it’s a statistic)
3% were in UTC+8. (statistic)
 
INFERENTIAL STATISTICS
 
They are methods for using sample data to make a general conclusions (inferences) about
populations.
 
PSYC 204 students who answered time zone survey -> whole PSYC 204 class
 
Sampling error
 
The discrepancy between a sample statistic and its population parameter is called sampling error.

 
Comparison between descriptive and inferential statistics
Descriptive:
 Summarize data
 Organize data
 Simplify data
Examples
 Tables
 Graphs
 Averages
 
 
Learning check
 
Answer (D)
 
Types od variables
 
Discrete variables
 Has separate, indivisible categories
 No values can exist between two neighbouring categories
o Example: Students could only score 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5 or 3 points. It's discrete
because it's a finite number of scores with no possible values in between those
scores.
Continuous variable
 Has infinite number of possible values between any two observed values
 Is divisible into infinite number of fractional parts
 
Real Limits of Continuous Variables
 Because continuous variables can be subdivided again and again, we need limits.
 Real limits are the boundaries of each interval representing scores measured on a
continuous number line.
o The real limit separating two adjacent scores is exactly halfway between the two
scores.
o Each score has two limits:
 The upper real limit marks the top of the interval.
 The lower real limit marks the bottom of the interval.
 
Measuring variables and scales
 Measurement assigns individuals or events to categories
o Categories can be names such as introvert/ extrovert or employed/unemployed
o They can be numerical value such as 68 inches or 175 pounds
 The categories used to measure a variable make up a scale of measurement
 Relationships between the categories determine different types of scales
 
 
 A nominal scale is an unordered set of categories identified only by name. Nominal
measurements only permit you to determine whether two individuals are the same or
different.

 An ordinal scale is an ordered set of categories. Ordinal measurements tell you the
direction of difference between two individuals.
 
 An interval scale is an ordered series of equal-sized categories. Interval measurements
identify the direction and magnitude of a difference. The zero point is located arbitrarily
on an interval scale.
The ZERO doesn’t mean NONE of the quantity – What is an example of this?
 Example: pH, SAT score, credit score.
 
 A ratio scale is an interval scale where a value of zero indicates none of the variable.
Ratio measurements identify the direction and magnitude of differences and allow ratio
comparisons of measurements.
 *All ratio scales are interval scales.
 
 

 
 
Learning check 2
 
Answer is C
 
Research methods
 
 Descriptive research (individual variables)
 One (or more) variables measured per individual.
 Statistics describe the observed variable
 May use categorical and/or numerical variables
 Not concerned with relationships between variables.
 
Example: Fluffiness of cats
 
 Correlational method
 One group of participants
 Measurement of two variables for each participant
 The goal is to describe type and magnitude of the relationship
 Patterns in the data reveal relationships
o Nonexperimental method of study
 Can demonstrate the existence of a relationship between two variables
 Does not provide an explanation for the relationship
 Most importantly, does NOT demonstrate a cause-and-effect relationship
between the two variables.
 Ex. salaries of recent graduates in spain vs france.
 
 Experimental method
 Goal is to demonstrate a cause-and-effect relationship between two variables.
 Manipulation: level of one variable is determined by the experimenter
 Control rules out influence of other variables.
 
Methods of control
 Random assignment of subjects
 Matching of subjects
 Holding the level of some potentially influential variables constant
Control condition
 Individuals do not receive the experimental treatment
 They either receive no treatment or they receive a neutral,
placebo treatment
 Purpose: to provide a baseline for comparison with the experimental condition
Experimental condition
 Individuals do receive the experimental treatment
 Experimental comparison between groups.
 
Important terminology
 Independent variable (IV): the variable that is manipulated by the researcher.
 Dependent variable (DV): the one that is observed to assess the effect of treatment.
 
 
 Other types of research studies, know as non-experimental or quasi- experimental, are
similar to experiments because they also compare groups of scores.
o *Quasi-independent variables are those who are uninfluenced by one another.
 These studies do not use a manipulated variable to differentiate the groups. Instead, the
variable that differentiates the groups is usually a pre-existing participant variable (such
as male/female) or a time variable (such as before/after).
 Because these studies do not use the manipulation and control of true experiments, they
cannot demonstrate cause and effect relationships. As a result, they are similar to
correlational research because they simply demonstrate and describe relationships.
 
Learning check 3
 
Answer is D.
 
Learning Check 4
 
Answer is D. type of research method - experimental comparison of groups.
 
Statistical Notation
 Statistics uses operation and notations you have already learned (Appendix A has a
mathematical review)
 The individual measurements or scores obtained for a research participant will be
identified by the letter X (or X and Y if there are multiple scores for each individual)
 The number of scores in a data set will be identified by N for a population or n for a
sample.
 
 Summing a set of values is a common operation in statistics and has its own notation. The
Greek letter sigma, will be used to stand for "the sum of." For example, identifies the sum
of the X scores.
 
 
 
Learning check 5

Answer is B.
 
On Mindtap,
 
Which of the following lists the correct order for calculating ∑( X –  1)2?
 
This is correct: d. subtract 1 from every term, square the result of each subtraction, and then add
up the squares.
 

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