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Summary for correlational research methods - grade: 8,5 - Tilburg University

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A summary of the lectures and the book. Very detailed, I received an 8,5 for the exam using only this summary !

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Correlational research methods

Lecture 0​ 3
Mean, standard deviation and variance​ 3
Z-score​ 3
T-statistic​ 3
Statistical power​ 3
Pearson’s R​ 4

Lecture 1 Basics of statistical research and correlation​ 5
Descriptive statistics​ 5
Inferential statistics​ 5
P-values and statistical power​ 5
Measurement levels​ 6
Research designs​ 6
Relationships between variables​ 6

Lecture 2 Simple regression 1/2​ 7
Confidence interval​ 7
Regression analysis​ 8

Lecture 3 Simple regression 2/2​ 10
Interpretation of the estimated regression coefficient b1​ 10
Standardized regression coefficient (β)​ 10
Total variance and R2​ 10
Other forms of inferential statistics​ 11

Lecture 4 Multiple regression analysis​ 12
Basics of multiple regression analysis​ 12
Correlations and regression analysis​ 12

Lecture 5 Multiple regression analysis​ 13
How well can we predict the variance in Y using the entire set of predictors?​ 13
How well does every predictor explain/predict variance in Y, controlled for all other
predictors in the model?​ 14

Lecture 6 Multiple regression analysis​ 15
Multiple linear regression analysis​ 15
Hypothesis testing​ 15

Lecture 7 multiple regression analysis​ 16
Partial effects for each predictor​ 16
Nested models​ 16
Testing for partial effect of a cluster of variables​ 16
Hierarchical regression analysis​ 17

,Lecture 8 Dummy variable​ 18
Multiple regression with dichotomous categorical predictors​ 18
Multiple regression with a categorical and quantitative predictor​ 18
Multiple regression with a categorical predictor with more response categories​ 19

Lecture 9 Interaction effects​ 20
Interaction between a continuous and dichotomous variable​ 20
Interaction between continuous variables and nominal variables with more than 2
categories​ 20

Lecture 10 multicollinearity​ 21
Probing​ 21
Multicollinearity​ 21

Lecture 11 Logistic regression analysis​ 22
Dichotomous logistic regression​ 22
Binary logistic regression​ 23

Lecture 12 types of logistic regression​ 24
Multiple logistic regression (continuous predictors)​ 24
Multiple logistic regression (continuous + binary predictor)​ 24
Multiple logistic regression (continuous + categorical predictor)​ 24
Multiple logistic regression with interaction​ 25
Significance testing​ 25

, Lecture 0
Mean, standard deviation and variance
When two scores change from the original but have the same outcome (15 becomes 17 and
7 becomes 5).
-​ Mean: stays the same, same average
-​ Variance: increases, SS increases because the deviance scores are bigger.
-​ Standard deviation: increases
When all scores are two units lower than the original scores
-​ Mean: decreases, lower average
-​ Variance: stays the same (same difference between scores)
-​ Standard deviation: stays the same
When all scores are multiplied by 2
-​ Mean: increases, higher average
-​ Variance: increases, scores get higher and difference between scores is bigger
-​ Standard deviation: increases

Z-score
A statistic that gives the location in a comparable sense relative to its distribution: you can
find how close/far a value is from the mean. Used for hypothesis testing by using critical
regions and seeing if the score lies there.

Sampling distribution
Sampling distribution of the mean: disctribution of outcomes that is obtained when
thousands of random samples are taken from the population and the mean is calculated for
each sample. Standard error is the standard deviation of this distribution. This gets smaller
with a larger sample.

T-statistic
Similar to Z-score but used when you don’t know the population standard deviation.

Statistical power




Type 1 error: reject the null hypothesis while the null hypothesis is actually true (false
positive).
Type 2 error: fail to reject the null hypothesis while alternative hypothesis is actually true
(false negative).
Statistical power: the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when the alternative
hypothesis is true (true positive). Influenced by:
-​ α level, higher is higher power
-​ Effect size, larger is higher power
-​ Sample size, larger is higher power

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