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Chapter 19: Statistics Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 01 September 2005
Notetaker: Peter Lee
Advanced Placement Psychology
Chapter 19: Statistics
( http://www.ApPsychology.net )
•  Percentile Rank – A percentage that describes your rank among those also being evaluated.  I.e. if your percentile
rank on a test is 90, then your score is higher than 90% of the class.  It is impossible to get 100% percentile rank
because you cannot get higher than everyone in the class, including yourself.
•  Mean – The average score. Add all the numbers up and divide by number of terms. The mean of {2,2,3,10,98} is 23.
•  Median – The middle point of all the terms such that half is above the number and half is below the number (50t h
percentile).  Arrange the number from highest to lowest or vice versa and find the number in the middle. The median
of {2,2,3,10,96} is 3.
•  Mole – The number that occurs the most. Count to see which number appears the most. The mode of the
{2,2,3,10,98} is 2.
•  Range – The range of the scores is the difference between the highest number and the lowest number.  The range of
GPA score is from 0.0 to 4.0.
•  Standard Deviation – A measurement of how far scores differ/deviate from the mean. The standard deviation of
{5,6,5,6,6,7,5,4} is very low because terms hardly deviate from the mean of 5.5.  Whereas, the standard deviation of
{5,10,8,18,-6,5,-7,22} is high.
Find the Standard Deviation of {2,3,3,4}
(1) Find the mean.
 (2+3+3+4)/4 = 3
(2) Subtract the mean from each term and square it. (2-3)²=1, (3-3)²=0, (3-3)²=0, (4-3)²=1
(3) Find the average of the deviations from the mean. (1+0+0+1)/4 = 0.5
(4) Square root the average and that’s the standard
deviation
 (0.5)^1/2 = 0.7071
Normally this number should be rounded to the
same decimal place as the data.  But 0.7071 is show n
for better understanding.
0.7071 ‰

‰ 1
•  Normal curve or more commonly known as the bell curve is a distribution graph that dictates 68% of the scores
should circa the mean.  More specifically, 68% of the scores should fall within 1 standard deviation and 95% should
fall within 2 standard deviations from the mean.
•  Scatterplot – A graphical representation of data by usage of dots.  The degree of cluster or formation of a slope can
dictate the correlation between the two variables.
•  Correlation – The relationship between 2 events. I.e. Traffic accidents increase with increasing temperatures;
businesses drop as Christmas ends.
Correlation Coefficient – A proportional number that measures correlation – how strongly two events vary
together.
•  Positive Correlation – The two events increase and/or decrease together.  For example, increasing study time
positively correlates with increasing grades or decreased food consumption positively correlates with
decreased excitability.  Positive correlation coefficients are positive numbers ranging from 0.00 (no
correlation) to 1.00 (perfect correlation).  In a scatterplot graph, a positive correlation exists if a positive slope
is seen.
•  Negative Correlation – One event increases and the other decreases or vice versa.  For example, decreasing
number of hours of sleep negatively correlates with increases traffic accidents or increasing alcohol
consumption decreases alertness.  Negative correlation coefficients are negative numbers ranging from –1.00
(perfect correlation) to 0.00 (no correlation).  In a scatterplot, negative a correlation exists if a negative slope
is seen.


 
 
 
 
 
•  * Be sure to remember that CORRELATIONS DO NOT NECESSARILY MEAN CAUSATION.  If car accidents
increase with increasing temperatures, it does not necessarily mean that hot temperatures cause more traffic
accidents!!
•  * Be aware of ILLUSORY CORRELATION – seeing relationships between something when there is none.  If you
believe that black-colored dogs are more aggressive than white-colored dogs, then you will be more likely to notice
and recall events where black-colored dogs show aggressiveness to confirm your belief (also know as “self -serving
bias”).
•  Regression toward the mean – Tendency for extreme values to go back (“regress”) to the average value (mean).  I.e.
If you normally get 80% on your tests and suddenly you got an extreme (unusual) score of 50%, then on your next test
you are likely to get around 80% again.
•  Statistical Significance – A measure of how likely an event is due to chance alone.  I.e. If average marks concerning
two classes are statistically significant, then the marks are actually different, not due to random chance or sampling
errors.  Statistical significance is usually determined by mathematical analysis of the samples.
Graphs (Be Aware Of)
Bibliography
Myers, David G., Psychology Fifth Edition. Worth Publishers, Inc. New York, NY ©1998

 
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