Introduction To Stati Stics and Quantitative Research Methods
Introduction To Stati Stics and Quantitative Research Methods
Statistics and
Quantitative
Research Methods
Purpose of Presentation
Statistics Defined
What is statistics?
Example: Frequencies
Statistics humour
Research Methods
Draw Conclusions
Analyze Data
Collect Data
Research Design
This step is
minimized
when using
secondary
data
Basic Steps
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
Inferential:
Types of Statistics
Variables
Nominal
Ordinal
Interval
Ratio
Levels of Data
Nominal= categorical
E.g. Apples and pears, gender, eye colour, ethnicity.
Data that is classified into categories and cannot be arranged in
any particular order.
Nominal=Categorical=Dichotomous
Ratio= similar to interval scale, but has true zero point E.g.
Weight, salary ($0=$0).
Types of Variables
Types of Variables
Occupational type
Income level
Example
3 Questions:
For each question:
What is the dependent variable in this study?
What is the independent variable?
What is the level of data?
Back to stats..
The Mean
Median
Mode
What is a mode?
Skewed distributions
What is a variance?
X=individual score
M=mean of all scores
n= number of scores
Example:
80 mean score
5 scores
Individual scores: 90, 90, 70, 70, 80.
Sum of (90-80), (90-80), (70-80), (7080), (80-80)= 0
NEED TO SQUARE!
(90-80)2 + (90-80)2 +(70-80) 2 +
(70-80) 2 + (80-80)2 =
100+100+100+100+0=400
Variance=100
S = standard deviation
= sum of
X = individual score
M = mean of all scores
n = sample size
(number of scores)
Standard Deviation =10
Normal Distribution
In a normal distribution,
about 68% of the scores
are within one standard
deviation of the mean.
.025
.025
Inferential Statistics
Inferential Statistics
2)
Hypotheses
Hypotheses
Alpha
Alpha level, or significance level, is the value that is determined
by the researcher in order to reject or retain the null hypothesis.
It is a pre-determined value, not calculated.
Type 1 Error
Beta
You kept the null hypothesis when you should not have.
If Drug X and Drug Y produced different effects, and it was
Reject Ho
Dont reject Ho
Ho:
TYPE 1 ERROR
Correct Decision
H1:
Correct Decision
TYPE 2 ERROR
Statistical Significance
What is statistical significance?
Confidence Intervals
When we measure the size of the effect we use confidence
intervals.
The odds ratio we found from our sample (E.g. Smokers are 2.3
times more likely to develop cancer than non-smokers) is only
true for the sample we are using.
This exact number is only true for the sample we have examined;
it might be slightly different if we used another sample.
For this reason we calculate a confidence interval- which is the
range in risk we would expect to see in this population.
Power
Power
Statistics
Descriptive
Inferential
Parametric
Non-Parametric
T-test
Mann-Whitney U test
ANOVA
Kruskal-Wallis test
Pearsons Correlation
Chi-Square test
Linear Regression
Wilcoxon test
Parametric Tests
Non-Parametric Tests
Normality
Types of Analyses
Types of Analyses
Types of Analyses
-Multiple regression
-Multiple logistic regression
Research Examples
Assumptions
If your data do not meet the assumptions for a specific test, you
may be able to use a non-parametric test instead.
Examples of Tests
T-Test
Allows the comparison of the mean of 2 groups.
Compares actual difference between two means in relation to
the variation in the data (expressed as the standard deviation of
the difference between the means).
Null hypothesis: Drug A and Drug B will have equal blood sugar
lowering times (no difference).
Alternative hypothesis: Drug A and B will have different blood
sugar lowering times (difference).
Examples of Tests
Examples of Tests
Correlation
Allows an examination of the relationship between variables; is
there a relationship between these variables? Are they positively
or negatively related?
A correlation coefficient of 0 means that there is no relationship
between the variables, -1 negative relationship, 1 positive
relationship.
Important: Correlation is not causation.
Examples of Tests
Linear Regression
Focuses on prediction. Involves discovering the equation for a
line that is the best fit for the given data. That linear equation is
then used to predict values for the data.
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
Conclusions
Resources
Great resources:
Statistics without tears: An introduction for nonmathematicians.
Author: Derek Rowntree
Introduction to
Statistics and
Quantitative
Research Methods