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PSYC 201 -- T-test lab

An investigator does an experiment to test the idea that caffeine has an adverse effect on memory function. She assigns 10 participants at random to a group that will get the equivalent of four cups of coffee before they take a test of memory function. She assigns 10 additional participants to a group that gets a placebo before taking the same test of memory function. In the test of memory function, participants are given a list of twenty words to remember and then asked to recall as many words from the list as they can. The researcher predicts that participants in the caffeine condition will remember significantly fewer words than participants in the placebo condition. The data for the participants in the two groups are presented below. Caffeine Group Placebo Group ------------------- ------------------8 12 10 9 7 14 9 10 11 11 9 13 8 14 10 10 9 9 11 11 Please address each of the following questions. a. b. c. d. e. Please write both the null and alternative hypotheses. Please write the decision rule for rejecting the null hypothesis. Using SPSS, please determine the observed value for t. State your decision as to whether to reject the null hypothesis or not. Please write a conclusion sentence for this test in APA format.

Below are instructions for using SPSS to get the observed value for t Entering the data into the SPSS spreadsheet There are two things that you know about each participant. First, you know which level of the independent variable theyve been assigned to. In other words, each participant is in the caffeine condition (group 1) or the placebo condition (group 1). That means for a variable that we might name caffgrp each persons will get a score of 1 if theyre in the caffeine group and a score of 2 if theyre in the placebo group. The variable name for this column would be caffgrp. In this example, there will be 20 rows in the spreadsheet because there are 20 participants. The only other thing we know about each participant is their score on the dependent variable, memory function. These scores go in a second column that is labeled with the variable name memory.

So that it. The data set has 20 rows (for the 20 participants) and it has two columns of numbers (for the two variables). Independent-samples t-test using SPSS

Click Analyze Click on the Compare Means pull-down menu Click on Independent-Samples T Test. You should now see the Independent-Samples T Test window. Move the variable memory over to the Test Variable(s) box. The test variable is the dependent variable. Move the variable caffgrp over to the Grouping Variable box. The grouping variable is the independent variable. Click on the Define Groups button. There is where you tell SPSS which groups you want to compare. Enter a 1 for the Group 1 box and a 2 for the Group 2 box. Then click Continue. Click OK back at the Independent-Samples T Test window.

Using the SPSS output window for an Independent-Samples T Test

In the Group Statistics box you get the means and standard deviations for both groups. In the Independent-Samples T Test box, you get the results for the t-test. The row to look in is labeled Equal variances assumed. Look in the section of the box labeled t-test for Equality of Means. The value for t is 2.885. The test has 18 degrees of freedom. The significance level is .010. Because the alpha level has been set at .05, all you have to do to see is the test is significant is to see is the significance level reported in the out is .05 or less. .010 is less than .05, so we can say that the test is significant. Because the test is significant, our decision is to reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative hypothesis. The sentence that we are allowed to write as our conclusion is the following: Participants in the caffeine condition remember significantly fewer words than participants in the placebo condition, t (18) = -2.89, p < .05. Notice that at the end of the sentence the researcher has given her statistical justification for why she made that statement. She has reported the value for t, the number degrees of freedom for the test, and the

significance level of the test. Also notice that the symbols t and p are in italics. This is the format we want you to use in reporting the result for a t-test. Use the same format whether or not the test is significant.

Answers to the sample problem a. Null hypothesis: Participants in the caffeine condition do not remember significantly fewer words than participants in the placebo condition. Alternative hypothesis: Participants in the caffeine condition remember significantly fewer words than participants in the placebo condition.
b.

Decision rule: If t -1.73, reject HO.

c. t = -2.885 d. Decision: reject HO


e.

Participants in the caffeine condition remember significantly fewer words than participants in the placebo condition, t (18) = -2.89, p < .05.

Problems
1.

An investigator predicts that students taking an achievement test in the morning will perform differently than students taking the same test in the afternoon. Eight students are assigned to take the test in the morning and 8 students are assigned to take the test in the afternoon.

Morning Group: 25, 31, 44, 36, 29, 42, 39, 41 Afternoon Group: 22, 25, 24, 27, 33, 28, 31, 34 a. State the null and alternative hypotheses. b. Write the decision rule for rejecting this null hypothesis. c. Using an alpha level of .05, test the null hypothesis, and state your decision about whether or not the researcher should reject the null hypothesis. d. In APA format, write a conclusion sentence that states what the researcher has learned from doing the test. e. What is independent variable in this study. What is the dependent variable in this study. f. Which is the experimental condition. Which is the control condition.

2. An investigator theorizes that people who participate in a regular program of exercise will have lower levels of anxiety than people who do not participate in a regular program of exercise. To test this idea the investigator randomly assigns 12 subjects to an exercise program for 10 weeks and 12 subjects to a non-exercise comparison group. Lower anxiety scores reflect lower levels of anxiety. Please test the investigator's theory using an alpha level of .05. Exercise Group: 18, 23, 21, 19, 17, 16, 20, 25, 18, 19, 23, 21 No-Exercise Group: 26, 28, 25, 24, 31, 29, 27, 28, 27, 25, 23, 28 a. State the null and alternative hypotheses. b. Write the decision rule for rejecting this null hypothesis. c. Using an alpha level of .05, test the null hypothesis, and state your decision about whether or not the researcher should reject the null hypothesis. d. In APA format, write a conclusion sentence that states what the researcher has learned from doing the test. e. What is independent variable in this study. What is the dependent variable in this study. f. Which is the experimental condition. Which is the control condition. 3. An investigator thinks that people under the age of forty have better vocabularies than people over sixty years of age. The investigator administers a vocabulary test to a group of 12 younger subjects and to a group of 31 older subjects. Higher scores reflect better performance. Under 40 Group: 31, 36, 33, 41, 37, 40, 36, 29, 31, 34, 41, 38 Over 40 Group: 43, 41, 46, 44, 48, 39, 37, 46, 44, 50, 48, 45 a. State the null and alternative hypotheses. b. Write the decision rule for rejecting this null hypothesis. c. Using an alpha level of .05, test the null hypothesis, and state your decision about whether or not the researcher should reject the null hypothesis. d. In APA format, write a conclusion sentence that states what the researcher has learned from doing the test. e. What is independent variable in this study. What is the dependent variable in this study. f. Which is the experimental condition. Which is the control condition. Print out and hand in the output window for these tests.

Answers Independent t-test problems


1. HO: Students taking an achievement test in the morning do not perform differently than students taking the same test in the afternoon. H1: Students taking an achievement test in the morning perform differently than students taking the same test in the afternoon. Decision Rule: If t -2.14 or if t +2.145 , reject HO. Decision: Reject HO Conclusion sentence: Students taking an achievement test in the morning perform differently than students taking the same test in the afternoon, t (14) = 2.75, p < .05. 2. HO: People who participate in a regular program of exercise do not have lower levels of anxiety than people who do not participate in a regular program of exercise. H1: People who participate in a regular program of exercise have lower levels of anxiety than people who do not participate in a regular program of exercise. Decision Rule: If t -1.72 , reject HO. Decision: Reject HO

Conclusion sentence: People who participate in a regular program of exercise have lower levels of anxiety than people who do not participate in a regular program of exercise, t (22) = -5.39, p < .05. 3. HO: People under the age of forty do not have better vocabularies than people over sixty years of age. H1: People under the age of forty have better vocabularies than people over sixty years of age. Decision Rule: If t -1.72, reject HO. Decision: Fail to reject HO Conclusion sentence: People under the age of forty do not have better vocabularies than people over sixty years of age, p > .05. [Note: This is because the results are in the opposite direction from the prediction of the researcher!]

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