Core concepts
Tests and when to use them
effect size and power
estimation and confidence intervals
Application scenarios
steps of hypothesis tests
100

What is the hypothesis test that states "there is no effect or difference"?

The Null Hypothesis

100

you compare a sample mean to a population mean, and you know the population SD. What test would you use?

Z-test

100

What is effect size?

Standardized units for comparing mean differences. Tells you how meaningful a result is

100

what is a point estimate?

one specific number from our data, like the mean. More precise, but less accurate

100

a psychologist measures stress levels in a class of 25 students and compares them to the national average. They know the mean, but not the standard deviation of the population. What test should they use?

One-sample t-test

100

what are the general steps of hypothesis tests?

1: set up H(0) and H(A)

2: calculate relevant statistics

3: calculate probability under the null

4: identify cut-off values

5: make your decision

200

what is the hypothesis that states that there is a difference?

The Alternative Hypothesis

200

You compare a sample mean to a population mean, but the population SD is unknown. Which test would you use?

One-sample t-test

200

what is the formula for Cohen's d in a one-sample t-test?

d=M−μ/SD

d = (sample mean) - (population mean)/(standard deviation)

200

what is an interval estimate?

ranges that include the point estimate, but allows for some error. Less precise, but more accurate

200

a researcher tests whether caffeine improves memory by comparing a group that drinks coffee to one that doesn't. Which test should they use?

Independent samples t-test

200

what are the steps for a one-sample t-test

1: set up H(0) and H(A)

2: Calculate M and SD (if not given)

3: calculate SE and DF

4: calculate t

5: look up critical t

6: make a decision

300

What is the step-by-step process of deciding whether data supports the null or alternative hypothesis?

hypothesis testing

300

You are comparing two independent groups (treatment vs. placebo, women vs. men, etc). which test would you use?

Independent samples t-test

300

What is Cohen's d  benchmarks for small, medium, and large effect sizes?

~0.2 = small

~0.5 = medium

~0.8 = large

300

what is the correct interpretation of a 95% confidence interval?

if we were to repeat a study an infinite number of times, 95% of those intervals would contain the true population mean

300

A therapist measures a clients' anxiety before and after 8 weeks for mindfulness training. Which test should they use?

paired samples t-test

300

what are the steps for an independent samples t-test?

1: set up H(0) and H(A)

2: calculate M for each group and pooled SD (if not given)

3: calculate SE and DF

4: calculate t

5: look up critical t in the t table

6: make a decision

400

when results are consistent across multiple studies, what is that called?

replication

400

you are comparing the same participants at two times or conditions. Which test should you use?

Paired samples t-test (NOTE: this will not be on the test! But it's still important to know)

400

what is statistical power?

the ability of a study to detect the effect you are interested in. Or, how likely a study is to find a real life effect when one actually exists

400

if two means' confidence intervals overlap, what does that suggest?

It's likely not statistically significant (fail to reject the null hypothesis)

400

a cognitive scientist compares average reaction times for gamers to the general population. The population mean is known. Which test should they use?

z-test

400

what are the steps for a paired samples t-test?

1: set up H(0) and H(A)

2: calculate M(diff) and SD (diff) (if not given)

3: calculate SE and DF

4: calculate t

5: look up critical value in t-table

6: make your decision

500

What does it mean to ACCEPT the null?

Trick question! There is no such thing as "accepting" the null hypothesis. We can only FAIL TO REJECT the null hypothesis

500

what is counterbalancing?

When you change the order that participants experience conditions in a study to avoid order effects, such as practice or fatigue

500

What statistic is NOT affected by sample size?

effect size

500

as sample size increases, what happens to the confidence interval width?

it becomes narrower, which means a more precise estimate

500

a social psychologist compares two teaching methods and finds p =0.02 and Cohen's d = 0.15. What can they conclude?

the difference is statistically significant (0.02 < 0.05), but the effect size is really small, meaning it may not be practically meaningful

500

What are the steps for a z-test?

1: set up H(0) and H(A)

2: calculate mean, if not given

3: calculate z

4: see if it's beyond the critical value in the critical z-table

5: make a decision