Hypothesis Testing Basics
Z-Scores and Sampling
Standard Error & Sample Size
Tests
Grab bag
100

The hypothesis that states there is no effect or no difference.

What is the null hypothesis?

100

After converting scores to z-scores, the distribution has a mean of this value.

What is 0?

100

The hypothetical standard deviation of the sampling distribution of the mean.

What is standard error?

100

This test is used when the population standard deviation is unknown.

What is a t-test?

100

This statistic measures the average distance of scores from the mean.

What is standard deviation?

200

The probability of rejecting a TRUE null hypothesis.

What is Type I error?

200

Approximately this percentage of scores fall within ±1 SD in a normal distribution.

What is 68%?

200

Increasing sample size causes the standard error to do this.

What is decrease?

200

Compared to the z distribution, this distribution is more spread out when sample size is small.

What is the t distribution?

200

Cohen’s d is a measure of this concept.

What is effect size?

300

The probability of failing to reject a FALSE null hypothesis.

What is Type II error?

300

This statistic measures how far a score is from the mean in standard deviation units.

What is a z-score?

300

A study with this combination is most likely to reject the null: large sample size and ____ variability.

What is low variability?

300

A researcher predicts that a treatment will increase memory scores. This type of hypothesis test would typically be used.

What is a one-tailed test?

300

The probability of correctly rejecting a false null hypothesis.


What is statistical power?

400

When a test statistic falls into this region, the null hypothesis is rejected.

What is the critical region?

400

The natural difference between a sample statistic and the true population parameter due to random sampling.

What is sampling error?

400

This theorem explains the shape, central tendency and variability of the sampling distribution of the mean.  

What is the Central Limit Theorem.  

400

If t(28) = 3.21, p < .05 this is the number of participants in the sample.

What is 29?

400

An interval estimate constructed from sample data that is expected to contain the population mean with a specified level of confidence.

What is a confidence interval?


500

This decides how large the critical region is.

What is the alpha level (criterion)?
500

This law states that as sample size increases, the sample mean tends to get closer to the population mean.

What is the law of large numbers?

500

The distribution formed by taking the mean from every possible sample of a given size from a population.

What is the sampling distribution of the mean?

500

In a two-tailed z-test with α = .05, the critical values are approximately these two numbers.

What are ±1.96?

500

This measure of treatment magnitude stays the same whether the sample size is 25 or 400.

What is Cohen's d (effect size)?

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