Study Sheet for
Final Exam:
The final exam will be in two parts. For
Part 1, you will be asked to run two X2 analyses.
This section will be worth 50 points. For
Part 2, you will be asked to complete 20 multiple choice questions.
Each question will be worth 2.5 points. This
section will be worth 50 points also. The final
exam will count towards 20% of your final grade in the course.
Part 1:
A. You
want to know if, at New Paltz, the frequency of people with blue eyes
is significantly different from the frequency of people with brown eyes.
You ask 100 people their eye colors. You
assume an alpha level of p < .05. Here are your
results:
Eye color
Blue
Brown
37
51
1. In
words, what is the null hypothesis?
2. Compute
X2.
3. What
is X2critical?
4. What
is your decision concerning the null hypothesis? EXPLAIN.
B. According
to the World Almanac, 60% of people in the United States are
Christian, 10% are Muslim, 4% are Jewish, and 26% are some other
religion (In reality, I made these numbers up). You
are curious to see if the religious denominations of people in New York
fit these national proportions. You randomly survey
200 New York citizens asking each what his or her religious
denomination is. You obtain the following
frequencies:
Christian
Muslim
Jewish
Other
143
8
30
19
You assume an alpha
level of p < .05.
1. In
words, what is the null hypothesis?
2. Compute
X2.
3. What
is X2critical?
4. What
is your decision concerning the null hypothesis? EXPLAIN.
Part 2:
You will need to
understand the following concepts:
1. Measures
of central tendency
2. Standard
deviation and variance
3. Z
scores
4. Correlation:
Different patterns of correlation
5. Correlation:
Correlation and causation
6. Bivariate
regression: Its purpose
7. Bivariate
regression: The difference between the raw score
and Z-score prediction models.
8. Relate
the concept of alpha level to a binomial probability distribution
9. Characteristics
of a normal distribution (related to raw and Z scores)
10. Hypothesis
testing: Conclusions that can and cannot be drawn
11. One-tailed
versus two-tailed tests
12. When
to use a population distribution versus a distribution of means
13. Characteristics
of a distribution of means
14. Type
I and Type II error
15. Statistical
Power (what it is and what influences it)
16. Alpha
and Beta
17. Cohen's
d
18. t-tests:
A. Fundamental
characteristics of t-tests
B. How
the t distribution differs from a normal distribution
19. Different
kinds of t-tests:
A. Repeated
measures t-test (what it is used for and conclusions that can be drawn
from it)
B. Independent
means t-test (what it is used for and conclusions
that can be drawn from it)
20. Analysis
of Variance (ANOVA):
A. Characteristics
of the F distribution
B. Intepreting
the equation for F (What MSB and MSW represent)
C. What
influences an obtained F score
D. What
conclusions can and cannot be made based on an ANOVA
Answers to Part 1:
A.
Eye color
Blue
Brown
37 (44)
51 (44)
1. In
words, what is the null hypothesis? The number of people with brown
eyes is equal to the number of people with blue eyes.
2. Compute
X2. In this case, for both blue and
brown eyed people, E = N/2 = 88/2 = 44
X2 =
(O-E)2
S ----------
E
= (37-44)2
(51-44)2
-----------
+ -----------
= 1.11 + 1.11 = 2.22
44
44
3. What
is X2critical? df = (Nc - 1) = 2-1 = 1; p
< .05; X2critical = 3.84
4. What
is your decision concerning the null hypothesis? EXPLAIN.
You failed to
reject the null hypothesis (as X2 was less than X2critical).
You have not found support for the notion that the frequency of
people with blue eyes in your population of interest was significantly
different from the frequency of people with brown eyes.
B.
Christian
Muslim
Jewish
Other
143 (120)
8 (20)
30 (8)
19 (52)
1. In
words, what is the null hypothesis? The proportions
of people representing the different religious groups in New York are
the same as the proportions of people representing these different
relgious groups in the country.
2. Compute
X2. E (the expected frequency) is
different for each religious group. For each group,
E = [N*(% of that group in population)].
X2 =
(O-E)2
S ---------- =
E
(143-120)2
(8-20)2
(30-8)2
(19-52)2
-----------
+ -------------
+
----------- +
-------------
120
20
8
52
= 4.41 + 7.2 + 60.5
+ 20.94 = 93.05
3. What
is X2critical? df = (Nc - 1) = 4-1 = 3; p
< .05; X2critical = 7.82
4. What is your decision concerning the null hypothesis? EXPLAIN. Reject the null hypothesis (as X2 was greater than X2critical). The percentages of people belonging to the different religious denominations in New York are significantly different from the percentages for the country.