Correlate this!
ANOVAs
Formulas? What formulas?
Two-Factor Shuffle
T-Statistic: Independent Who?
100

DAILY DOUBLE!
When dealing with r2 and r, these are the effect sizes.
What does r2 measure? What does r measure?

What are:

r2: .01 (small), .09 (medium), .25 (large), .50 (very large).
r: .10 (weak), .30 (moderate), .50 (strong), .70 (very strong).

100

This is what ANOVA stands for.

What is Analysis of Variance?

100
This is the formula for finding r.

What is r = SP/√SSx(SSy)

100

This is the number of null hypothesis you will have for a Two-Factor ANOVA.
This is how you describe them.

What are three?

Factor A has no effect. (There is no difference...)
Factor B has no effect. (There is no difference...)
There is no interaction between Factor A and Factor B. (The effects of __________ on ________ does not depend on _________.)

100

This is what it means to have a between-subjects research design.

What is use a separate group of participants for each treatment condition? (Two groups represent two different populations)

200

This is how rcrit is found.

What is: 

Alpha level
One or two-tailed test
df = n-2

200

When writing the hypothesis test, the null hypothesis shows this.

What is all groups are equal (H0)?

μ 1 = μ 2 = μ 3

What does the H1 show?

At least one mean is different

200

This is how you find Estimated Standard Error (SM).

What is SM = √s2/n ?

200
This is a two-factor study.

(Define it)

What is a research study with two independent (or quasi-independent) variables. 


200

This is how you determine if a t-Statistic test is one tailed or two tailed.

What is, does the question indicate a direction or expected outcome?

What else?

300

These are the four factors that will should be kept in mind when looking at the correlation and causation relationship.

What are:
IV DV Confusion
Restriction of Range
Outliers
Z-Variables (Partial Correlations)

300

This is the difference between the concepts of between group variance and within group variance.

What is between group variance is the natural, random differences and the group-based differences?

What is within groups variance is the natural, random differences alone?

300

This is the formula for pooled variance.

Follow up question: What kind of test is this used for?

What is s2p = SS1 + SS2 / df1 + df2

300

DAILY DOUBLE!
Come up to the board and graph an interaction.
Start with your chart with your Factor A, Factor B, and Levels.

The draw a graph showing an interaction. 

What is looks good to me?

300

This is what estimated standard error does.

What is for a sample, measure the amount of error to expect between a sample mean and the population mean?

What is for two groups, measures amount of error to expect between sample mean differences and population mean differences?

400

DAILY DOUBLE!
These are the Hypothesis notations for a two-tailed test.
These are the Hypothesis notations for a One-tailed positive test.
These are the Hypothesis notations for a One-tailed negative test.

What are:
H0: p = 0 and H1: p ≠ 0  [Two-Tailed]

H0: p ≤ 0 and H1: p > 0  [Positive]

H0: p ≥ 0 and H1: p < 0  [Negative]

400
DAILY DOUBLE!


This is the definition of a test-wise alpha.
This is the definition of an experiment-wise alpha.

What is test-wise alpha is the risk of a Type I error for one test.

What is experiment-wise alpha is the probability of a Type I error from all individual tests?

400

This is the formula for F.

F = Between Groups Variance / Within Groups Variance

400

When graphing a Two-Factor ANOVA and the lines do not cross, it means this. 

There is no interaction!

400

This is how you determine the degrees of freedom for a t-Statistics Test.

What is n1 + n2 - 2?
What is (n1 - 1) + (n2 - 1)?

500

When looking at a partial correlation, if a third variable brings down the relationship between two variables, it means this.

What is, that the initial correlation between the two variables was due to a shared relationship between the third variable.

(Ice-cream sales and crime rates)

500

In an ANOVA, k represents this.

What is the number of levels (or groups)?
k-1

500

This is how you find t in an Independent Measures. 

t = (M1 - M2) - (μ1 - μ2) / s(M1 - M2)

500

This is the definition of an interaction.

What is, when the effect of one factor depends on the different levels of a second factor, then there is an interaction between the factors?

500

μ1 - μ2 = this.

What is zero?