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SPSS: Chi-Square Test of Independence: Analyze

The document provides information on how to conduct a chi-square test of independence in SPSS. It discusses the assumptions of the chi-square test, how to set up the contingency table with descriptive statistics, how to calculate the test statistic by comparing observed and expected frequencies, determining the degrees of freedom, and comparing the calculated statistic to a critical value to determine if the null hypothesis can be rejected. An example comparing political party and views on gun control is presented to demonstrate these steps.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
121 views34 pages

SPSS: Chi-Square Test of Independence: Analyze

The document provides information on how to conduct a chi-square test of independence in SPSS. It discusses the assumptions of the chi-square test, how to set up the contingency table with descriptive statistics, how to calculate the test statistic by comparing observed and expected frequencies, determining the degrees of freedom, and comparing the calculated statistic to a critical value to determine if the null hypothesis can be rejected. An example comparing political party and views on gun control is presented to demonstrate these steps.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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SPSS: Chi-Square Test of

Independence
 Analyze
◦ Descriptive Statistics
 Crosstabs
 Move DV into Columns
 Move IV into Rows
 Statistics
 Chi-Square
 Cells
 Percentage
 Rows
 Columns
Chi-Square Test for Independence

 Chi-square test for independence,


can be used for testing hypotheses about
the relationship between two variables
in a population.

2
Chi-Square Test for Independence
 Chi Square is used when both variables are
measured on a nominal scale.
 It can be applied to interval or ratio data that
have been categorized into a small number of
groups.
 It assumes that the observations are randomly
sampled from the population.
 All observations are independent (an individual
can appear only once in a table and there are no
overlapping categories).
 It does not make any assumptions about the
shape of the distribution nor about the
homogeneity of variances.
3
Determine The Hypothesis: Whether
There is an Association or Not

 Ho : The two variables are independent


 Ha : The two variables are associated

4
Calculating Test Statistics
 Contrasts observed frequencies in each cell of a
contingency table with expected frequencies.
 The expected frequencies represent the
number of cases that would be found in each
cell if the null hypothesis were true ( i.e. the
nominal variables are unrelated).
 Expected frequency of two unrelated events is
product of the row and column frequency
divided by number of cases.
Fe= Fr Fc / N

5
Calculating Test Statistics

 ( Fo  Fe )  2
  
2

 Fe 

6
Calculating Test Statistics

 ( Fo  Fe )  2
  
2

 Fe 

7
Determine Degrees of Freedom

df = (R-1)(C-1)

8
Compare computed test statistic against
a tabled/critical value

 The computed value of the Pearson chi- square


statistic is compared with the critical value to
determine if the computed value is improbable
 The critical tabled values are based on
sampling distributions of the Pearson chi-
square statistic
 If calculated 2 is greater than 2 table value,
reject Ho

9
Example
 Suppose a researcher is interested in
voting preferences on gun control issues.
 A questionnaire was developed and sent
to a random sample of 90 voters.
 The researcher also collects information
about the political party membership of
the sample of 90 respondents.

10
Bivariate Frequency Table or
Contingency Table
Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat 10 10 30 50

Republican 15 15 10 40

f column 25 25 40 n = 90

11
Bivariate Frequency Table or
Contingency Table
Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat 10 10 30 50

Republican 15 15 10 40

f column 25 25 40 n = 90

12
Row frequency
Bivariate Frequency Table or
Contingency Table
Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat 10 10 30 50

Republican 15 15 10 40

f column 25 25 40 n = 90

13
Bivariate Frequency Table or
Contingency Table
Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat 10 10 30 50

Republican 15 15 10 40

f column 25 25 40 n = 90
Column frequency

14
1. Determine Appropriate Test
1. Party Membership ( 2 levels) and
Nominal
2. Voting Preference ( 3 levels) and
Nominal

15
2. Establish Level of Significance
Alpha of .05

16
3. Determine The Hypothesis
• Ho : There is no difference between D &
R in their opinion on gun control issue.

• Ha : There is an association between


responses to the gun control survey and
the party membership in the population.

17
4. Calculating Test Statistics

Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat fo =10 fo =10 fo =30 50


fe =13.9 fe =13.9 fe=22.2
Republican fo =15 fo =15 fo =10 40
fe =11.1 fe =11.1 fe =17.8
f column 25 25 40 n = 90

18
4. Calculating Test Statistics

Favor Neutral Oppose f row


= 50*25/90
Democrat fo =10 fo =10 fo =30 50
fe =13.9 fe =13.9 fe=22.2
Republican fo =15 fo =15 fo =10 40
fe =11.1 fe =11.1 fe =17.8
f column 25 25 40 n = 90

19
4. Calculating Test Statistics

Favor Neutral Oppose f row

Democrat fo =10 fo =10 fo =30 50


fe =13.9 fe =13.9 fe=22.2
= 40* 25/90
Republican fo =15 fo =15 fo =10 40
fe =11.1 fe =11.1 fe =17.8
f column 25 25 40 n = 90

20
4. Calculating Test Statistics

(10  13.89) 2 (10  13.89) 2 (30  22.2) 2


2    
13.89 13.89 22.2

(15  11.11) 2 (15  11.11) 2 (10  17.8) 2


 
11.11 11.11 17.8

= 11.03

21
5. Determine Degrees of
Freedom
df = (R-1)(C-1) =
(2-1)(3-1) = 2

22
6. Compare computed test statistic
against a tabled/critical value
 α = 0.05
 df = 2
 Critical tabled value = 5.991
 Test statistic, 11.03, exceeds critical value
 Null hypothesis is rejected
 Democrats & Republicans differ
significantly in their opinions on gun
control issues

23
SPSS Output for Gun Control Example

Chi-Square Tests

Asymp. Sig.
Value df (2-sided)
Pearson Chi-Square 11.025a 2 .004
Likelihood Ratio 11.365 2 .003
Linear-by-Linear
8.722 1 .003
Association
N of Valid Cases 90
a. 0 cells (.0%) have expected count less than 5. The
minimum expected count is 11.11.

24
Additional Information in SPSS Output
 Exceptions that might distort χ2
Assumptions
◦ Associations in some but not all categories
◦ Low expected frequency per cell
 Extent of association is not same as
statistical significance

Demonstrated
through an example
25
t Test
t Test
 t-test compares the actual difference
between two means in relation to the
variation in the data (expressed as the
standard deviation of the difference between
the means).
 The independent t-test, also called the two
sample t-test or student's t-test, is an
inferential statistical test that determines
whether there is a statistically significant
difference between the means in two
unrelated groups.
t distributions
 The t distribution is used when we do not
know the population information.
◦ So we use the sample to estimate the
population information.
◦ Because we are using the sample, the t
distribution changes based on that sample.
SPSS
 Analyze > compare means > one-sample t
SPSS
 Move variable over to the right.
 Be sure to change the test value.
SPSS
SPSS
Hypothesis Tests: The Single Sample t
Test

 The single sample t test


◦ When we know the population mean, but not
the standard deviation
◦ Degrees of freedom
df = N - 1 where N is sample size
 The t test
◦ The six steps of hypothesis testing
 1. Identify population, distributions, assumptions
 2. State the hypotheses
 3. Characteristics of the comparison distribution
 4. Identify critical values
df =N-1
 5. Calculate
 6. Decide

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