Choosing A Statistical Test: © Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion & Keith Morrison
Choosing A Statistical Test: © Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion & Keith Morrison
Choosing A Statistical Test: © Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion & Keith Morrison
One sample
Binomial
Ordinal
Chi-square (2) twosamples test Mann-Whitney Wilcoxon U test matched pairs test
KolmogorovSmirnov test WaldWolfowitz Spearman rho Ordinal regression analysis Sign test
Scale of data
One sample
t-test
Measures of difference
Factor analysis
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Mean: Data are normally distributed, with no outliers Mode: There are few values, and few scores, occurring which have a similar frequency Median: There are many ordinal values
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Chi-square: Data are categorical (nominal) Randomly sampled population Mutually independent categories Discrete data(i.e. no decimal places between data points) 80% of all the cells in a crosstabulation contain 5 or more cases Kolmogorov-Smirnov: The underlying distribution is continuous Data are nominal
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
t-test and Analysis of Variance:
Population is normally distributed Sample is selected randomly from the population Each case is independent of the other The groups to be compared are nominal, and the comparison is made using interval and ratio data The sets of data to be compared are normally distributed (the bell-shaped Gaussian curve of distribution) The sets of scores have approximately equal variances, or the square of the standard deviation is known The data are interval or ratio
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Wilcoxon test: The data are ordinal The samples are related Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis: The groups to be compared are nominal, and the comparison is made using ordinal data The populations from which the samples are drawn have similar distributions Samples are drawn randomly Samples are independent of each other
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Spearman correlation: The data are ordinal Pearson correlation: The data are interval and ratio
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Regression (simple and multiple): The data derive from a random or probability sample The data are interval or ratio (unless ordinal regression is used) Outliers are removed There is a linear relationship between the independent and dependent variables The dependent variable is normally distributed The residuals for the dependent variable (the differences between calculated and observed scores) are approximately normally distributed No collinearity (one independent variable is an exact or very close correlate of another)
ASSUMPTIONS OF TESTS
Factor analysis:
The data are interval or ratio The data are normally distributed Outliers have been removed The sample size should not be less than 100-150 persons There should be at least five cases for each variable The relationships between the variables should be linear The data must be capable of being factored