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Chapter 16 The Chi-Square Statistic

Chapter 16 The Chi-Square Statistic. PowerPoint Lecture Slides Essentials of Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences Seventh Edition by Frederick J. Gravetter and Larry B. Wallnau. Chapter 16 Learning Outcomes. Concepts to review. Proportions (math review, Appendix A)

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Chapter 16 The Chi-Square Statistic

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  1. Chapter 16The Chi-Square Statistic PowerPoint Lecture SlidesEssentials of Statistics for the Behavioral SciencesSeventh Editionby Frederick J. Gravetter and Larry B. Wallnau

  2. Chapter 16 Learning Outcomes

  3. Concepts to review • Proportions (math review, Appendix A) • Frequency distributions (Chapter 2)

  4. 16.1 Parametric and nonparametric statistical tests • Hypothesis tests used thus far tested hypotheses about population parameters • Parametric tests share several assumptions • Normal distribution in the population • Homogeneity of variance in the population • Numerical score for each individual • Nonparametric tests are needed when the research situation does not conform to the requirements of parametric tests.

  5. Chi-Square and other nonparametric tests • Do not state the hypotheses in terms of a specific population parameter • Make few assumptions about the population distribution • Often termed distribution free tests • Participants usually classified into categories • Nominal or ordinal scales are used • Data for nonparametric tests are frequencies

  6. 16.2 Chi-Square Test for Goodness of Fit • Uses sample data to test hypotheses about the shape or proportions of a population distribution. • Tests the fit of the proportions in the obtained sample with the hypothesized proportions of the population.

  7. Null hypothesis for Goodness of Fit • Specifies the proportion (or percentage) of the population in each category. • Rationale for null hypotheses: • No preference among categories. • No difference in one population from the proportions in another known population

  8. Figure 16.1 Distribution of eye-color for a sample of n = 40

  9. Data for the Goodness of Fit Test • In a sample of data, individuals in each category are counted. • Observed Frequencies in each categoryare measured. • Each individual is counted in one and only one category.

  10. Expected frequencies in the Goodness of Fit Test • Goodness of Fit test compares the Observed Frequencies of the data with the assumptions of the null hypothesis. • Construct Expected Frequencies that are in perfect agreement with the null hypothesis. • Expected Frequency is the frequency value that is predicted from H0 and the sample size. • Ideal, hypothetical sample distribution

  11. Chi-Square Statistics • Notation • χ2is the lower-case Greek letter Chi • fois the Observed Frequency • feis the Expected Frequency • Chi-Square Statistic

  12. Chi-Square distribution • Null hypothesis should be • Retained if the discrepancy between the Observed and Expected values is small • Rejected if the discrepancy between the Observed and Expected values is large • Chi-Square distribution includes values for all possible random samples when H0 is true • All chi-square values ≥ 0. • When H0 is true, Chi-square values will be small

  13. Degrees of freedom and Chi-Square • Chi-square distribution is positively skewed • Chi-square is a family of distributions • Distributions determined by degrees of freedom • Slightly different shape for each value of df • Degrees of freedom for Goodness of Fit Test • df = C – 1 • Cis the number of categories

  14. Figure 16.2 Chi-square distribution and the critical region

  15. Figure 16.3 Chi-square distributions for different values of df

  16. Critical region for a Chi-Square Test • Significance level is determined. • Critical value of chi-square is located in a table of critical values according to • Value for degrees of freedom (df) • Significance level chosen

  17. Figure 16.4 Critical region for Example 16.1

  18. Goodness of Fit and the Single-sample t Test • Both tests use data from one sample to test a hypothesis about a single population • Level of measurement determines test: • Numerical scores (interval / ratio scale) make it appropriate to compute a mean and use a t-test • Classification in nonnumeric categories (ordinal or nominal scale) make it appropriate to compute proportions or percentages and carry out a chi-square test

  19. Learning Check • The expected frequencies in a chi-square test ______.

  20. Learning Check - Answer • The expected frequencies in a chi-square test ______.

  21. Learning Check • Decide if each of the following statements is True or False.

  22. Answer

  23. 16.3 Chi-Square Test for Independence • Chi-Square Statistic can test for the existence of a relationship between two variables. • Each individual classified on each variable • Counts are presented in the cells of a matrix • Research may be experimental or nonexperimental • Frequency data from a sample is used to evaluate the relationship of two variables in the population.

  24. Null hypothesis for Test of Independence • Null hypothesis: two variables are independent • Two versions • Single population: No relationship between two variables in this population. • Two separate populations: No difference between distribution of variable in the two populations (defined by a nominal variable) • Variables are independent when there is no consistent predictable relationship between them.

  25. Observed and expected frequencies • Frequencies in the sample are the Observed frequencies for the test. • Expected frequencies are based on the null hypothesis of same proportions in each category (population) • Proportions of each row total to the cells in each column

  26. Computing expected frequencies • Frequencies computed by same method for each cell in the frequency distribution table • fc is frequency total for the column • fr is frequency total for the row

  27. Chi-Square Statistic for Test of Independence • Same equation as the Chi-Square Test of Goodness of Fit • Chi-Square Statistic • Degrees of freedom df = (R-1)(C-1) • R is the number of rows • C is the number of columns

  28. 16.4 Measuring effect size for Chi-Square • The Chi-square hypothesis test indicates that the difference did not occur by chance • Does not indicate the size of the effect • For a 2x2 matrix, the phi-coefficientΦ measures the strength of the relationship

  29. Effect size in a larger matrix • For a larger matrix, a modification of the phi-coefficient is used: Cramer’s V • df* is the smaller of (R-1) or (C-1)

  30. 16.5 Assumptions and restrictions for Chi-Square Tests • Independence of observations • Each observed frequency is generated by adifferent individual • Size of expected frequencies • Chi-square test should not be performed when the expected frequency of any cell is less than 5.

  31. 16.6 Special applications for the Chi-Square Tests • Chi-square and Pearson correlation both evaluate relationships between two variables. • Type of data obtained determines which is the appropriate test to use. • Chi-square is sometimes used instead of t-tests or ANOVA, when counts rather than means of categories are being compared. • Chi-square can evaluate the significance. • Parametric tests measure strength and effect size with greater precision.

  32. Learning Check • A basic assumption for a chi-square hypothesis test is ______.

  33. Learning Check - Answer • A basic assumption for a chi-square hypothesis test is ______.

  34. Learning Check • Decide if each of the following statements is True or False.

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