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The t Test for Two Related Samples

The t Test for Two Related Samples. Repeated-Measures Design. Repeated Measures Design. Repeated-measures design/ within-subject design is one in which a single sample of individuals is measured more than once on the same dependent variable.

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The t Test for Two Related Samples

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  1. The t Test for Two Related Samples Repeated-Measures Design

  2. Repeated Measures Design • Repeated-measures design/ within-subject design is one in which a single sample of individuals is measured more than once on the same dependent variable. • Same subjects are used in all of the treatment conditions. • Advantage – there is no risk that participants in one treatment group are different from the participants in the other group as you are using the same individuals • An alternative to is to select groups using ‘matched subjects’ design: each individual in one sample is matched with an individual in the other sample i.e. the two individuals are from similar ethnic backgrounds, similar ages, same sex etc.

  3. When do we use a repeated-measures design? Example: You want to test if eating honey before training makes individuals run faster. You take your sample and record their running time before you give them honey. Then you give them honey and record their running time again. Step 1 : Difference score (D score)= X2-X1 Step 2: Calculate MD for the difference scores and SS Step 3: H0: μD=0 and H1: μD≠0 Step 4: t= Step 5: s2= s= Step 6: ==

  4. More on related-samples t test Practices: Factors other than the treatment effect could cause participant’s score to change, not the treatment such as the passage of time (time effect). Also, as you are measuring at two different time points, individuals mood, health might change (order effect) To deal with this problem time-related factors or order effects is to counterbalance the presentation of treatments: Divide individuals in to two groups, give one group treatment 1 followed by treatment 2, and the second group treatment 2 and than 1 OR use matched-subjects design. Assumptions: • The observations within each treatment condition must be independent. Scores within each treatment is independent. • The population distribution of difference scores must be normal (if n>30, this assumption can be ignored)

  5. Questions A researcher uses a repeated-measures study to compare two treatment conditions with a set of 20 scores in each treatment. What would be the value of df for the repeated-measures t statistic? a. df = 19 b. df = 38 c. df = 18 d. df = 39

  6. Which of the following is the correct null hypothesis for a repeated-measures t test? a. µ1 = µ2 b. MD = 0 c. µD = 0 d. M1 = M2

  7. For a repeated-measures study comparing two treatments with a sample of n = 9 participants, the difference scores have a mean of M = 4.90 with SS = 288. What is the estimated standard error for the sample mean difference? a. 2 b. 36/8 = 4.5 c. 4 d. 36

  8. A researcher obtains a t statistic of t = 2.00 from a repeated measures study using n = 7 participants. If the effect size is measured using r2 then the value of r2 for the study would be ________. a. r2 = 4/10 = 0.40 b. r2 = 4.00 c. r2 = 4/40 = 0.10 d. The value of r2 cannot be determined from the information provided.

  9. A researcher obtains t = 4.00 and MD = 9 for a repeated-measures study. If the researcher measures effect size using the percentage of variance accounted for, what value will be obtained for r2? a. Cannot determine without additional information. b. 16/81 c. 16/97 d. 9/4

  10. A researcher obtains t = 2.35 for a repeated-measures study using a sample of n = 8 participants. Based on this t value, what is the correct decision for a two-tailed test? a. Reject the null hypothesis with either α= .05 or α = .01 b. Reject the null hypothesis with α = .05 but not with α = .01 c. Cannot make a decision without additional information. d. Fail to reject the null hypothesis with either α= .05 or α = .01

  11. A research report describing the results from a repeated-measures study states: The data show no significant difference between the two treatments, t(10) = 1.65, p > .05. Based on this report, you can conclude that a total of ________ individuals participated in the research study. a. 10 b. 9 c. 11 d. 12

  12. In general, if the variance of the difference scores increases, then what will happen to the value of the t statistic? a. It will stay the same - the t statistic is not affected by the variance of the difference scores. b. It will decrease (move toward 0 at the center of the distribution). c. It may increase or may decrease. There is no consistent relationship between variance and the size of the t statistic. d. It will increase (move farther toward the tail of the distribution).

  13. Which of the following samples will produce the largest value for a t statistic? Assume each sample has n = 10 scores. a. MD = 10 with SS = 20 b. MD= 5 with SS = 20 c. MD= 10 with SS = 40 d. MD= 5 with SS = 40

  14. Compared to an independent-measures design, a repeated-measured study is more likely to find a significant effect because it reduces the contribution of variance due to ________. a. MD b. degrees of freedom c. the effect of the treatment d. individual differences

  15. A researcher would like to examine how the chemical tryptophan, contained in foods such as turkey, can affect mental alertness. A sample of n = 9 college students is obtained and each student's performance on a familiar video game is measured before and after eating a traditional Thanksgiving dinner including roast turkey. The average score dropped by M = 14 points after the meal with SS = 1152 for the difference scores.a. Is there is significant difference in performance before eating versus after eating? Use a two-tailed test with = .05.b. Compute r2 to measure the size of the effect.c. Write a sentence demonstrating how the outcome of the test and the measure of effect size would appear in a research report.

  16. A researcher conducts an independent-measures study examining how the brain chemical serotonin is related to aggression. One sample of rats serves as a control group and receives a placebo that does not affect normal levels of serotonin. A second sample of rats receives a drug that lowers brain levels of serotonin. Then the researcher tests the animals by recording the number of aggressive responses each of the rats display. The data are as follows. a. Does the drug have a significant effect on aggression? Use an alpha level of .05, two tails.b. Compute Cohen's d to measure the size of the treatment effect.

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