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Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

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Page 1: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Psych 230

Psychological Measurement and Statistics

Pedro Wolf

September 16, 2009

Page 2: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Today….

• Symbols and definitions reviewed

• Understanding Z-scores

• Using Z-scores to describe raw scores

• Using Z-scores to describe sample means

Page 3: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Symbols and Definitions Reviewed

Page 4: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Definitions: Populations and Samples

• Population : all possible members of the group of interest

• Sample : a representative subset of the population

Page 5: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Symbols and Definitions: Mean

• Mean– the most representative score in the distribution

– our best guess at how a random person scored

• Population Mean = x

• Sample Mean = X

Page 6: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Symbols and Definitions

• Number of Scores or Observations = N

• Sum of Scores = ∑X

• Sum of Deviations from the Mean = ∑(X-X)

• Sum of Squared Deviations from Mean = ∑(X-X)2

• Sum of Squared Scores = ∑X2

• Sum of Scores Squared = (∑X)2

Page 7: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Symbols and Definitions: Variability

• Variance and Standard Deviation– how spread out are the scores in a distribution

– how far the is average score from the mean

• Standard Deviation (S) is the square root of the Variance (S2)

• In a normal distribution:– 68.26% of the scores lie within 1 std dev. of the mean

– 95.44% of the scores lie within 2 std dev. of the mean

Page 8: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Symbols and Definitions: Variability

• Population Variance = 2X

• Population Standard Deviation = X

• Sample Variance = S2x

• Sample Standard Deviation = Sx

• Estimate of Population Variance = s2x

• Estimate of Population Standard Deviation = sx

Page 9: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Normal Distribution and the Standard Deviation

Mean=66.57Var=16.736StdDev=4.091

HEIGHT

8176

7166

6156

51

HEIGHTFr

eque

ncy14

12

10

8

6

4

2

0

62.48 70.6658.38 74.75

Page 10: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Normal Distribution and the Standard Deviation

• IQ is normally distributed with a mean of 100 and standard deviation of 15

70 85 100 115 130

13% 13%

Page 11: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Understanding Z-Scores

Page 12: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

The Next Step

• We now know enough to be able to accurately describe a set of scores– measurement scale– shape of distribution– central tendency (mean)– variability (standard deviation)

• How does any one score compare to others in the distribution?

Page 13: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

The Next Step

• You score 82 on the first exam - is this good or bad?• You paid $14 for your haircut - is this more or less

than most people?• You watch 12 hours of tv per week - is this more or

less than most?• To answer questions like these, we will learn to

transform scores into z-scores – necessary because we usually do not know whether a

score is good or bad, high or low

Page 14: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• Using z-scores will allow us to describe the relative standing of the score– how the score compares to others in the sample or

population

Page 15: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Frequency Distribution of Attractiveness Scores

Page 16: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Frequency Distribution of Attractiveness Scores

Interpreting each score in relative terms:

Slug: below mean, low frequency score, percentile lowBinky: above mean, high frequency score, percentile mediumBiff: above mean, low frequency score, percentile high

To calculate these relative scores precisely, we use z-scores

Page 17: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores• We could figure out the percentiles exactly for every single

distribution– e ≈ 2.7183, π≈ 3.1415

• But, this would be incredibly tedious

• Instead, mathematicians have figured out the percentiles for a distribution with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1– A z-distribution

• What happens if our data doesn’t have a mean of 0 and standard deviation of 1?– Our scores really don’t have an intrinsic meaning

– We make them up

• We convert our scores to this scale - create z-scores

• Now, we can use the z-distribution tables in the book

Page 18: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• First, compare the score to an “average” score

• Measure distance from the mean– the deviation, X - X– Biff: 90 - 60 = +30– Biff: z = 30/10 = 3– Biff is 3 standard deviations above the mean.

Page 19: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• Therefore, the z-score simply describes the distance from the score to the mean, measured in standard deviation units

• There are two components to a z-score:– positive or negative, corresponding to the score being

above or below the mean– value of the z-score, corresponding to how far the score

is from the mean

Page 20: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• Like any score, a z-score is a location on the distribution. A z-score also automatically communicates its distance from the mean

• A z-score describes a raw score’s location in terms of how far above or below the mean it is when measured in standard deviations– therefore, the units that a z-score is measured in is

standard deviations

Page 21: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Raw Score to Z-Score Formula

• The formula for computing a z-score for a raw score in a sample is:

XSXXz

Page 22: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores - Example

• Compute the z-scores for Slug and Binky• Slug scored 35. Mean = 60, StdDev=10• Slug: = (35 - 60) / 10 = -25 / 10 = -2.5

• Binky scored 65. Mean = 60, StdDev=10• Binky: = (65 - 60) / 10 = 5 / 10 = +0.5

XSXXz

Page 23: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores - Your Turn

• Compute the z-scores for the following heights in the class. Mean = 66.57, StdDev=4.1

• 65 inches • 66.57 inches • 74 inches • 53 inches • 62 inches

XSXXz

Page 24: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores - Your Turn

• Compute the z-scores for the following heights in the class. Mean = 66.57, StdDev=4.1

• 65 inches: (65 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -1.57 / 4.1 = -0.38• 66.57 inches: (66.57 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 0 / 4.1 = 0 • 74 inches: (74 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 7.43 / 4.1 = 1.81 • 53 inches: (53 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -13.57 / 4.1 = -3.31 • 62 inches: (62 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -4.57 / 4.1 = -1.11

XSXXz

Page 25: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score to Raw Score Formula

• When a z-score and the associated Sx and X are known, we can calculate the original raw score. The formula for this is:

XSzX X ))((

Page 26: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score to Raw Score : Example

• Attractiveness scores. Mean = 60, StdDev=10

• What raw score corresponds to the following z-scores?

• +1 : X = (1)(10) + 60 = 10 + 60 = 70• -4 : X = (-4)(10) + 60 = -40 + 60 = 20• +2.5: X = (2.5)(10) + 60 = 25 + 60 = 85

XSzX X ))((

Page 27: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score to Raw Score : Your Turn

• Height in class. Mean=66.57, StdDev=4.1

• What raw score corresponds to the following z-scores?

• +2• -2• +3.5• -0.5

XSzX X ))((

Page 28: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score to Raw Score : Your Turn

• Height in class. Mean=66.57, StdDev=4.1

• What raw score corresponds to the following z-scores?

• +2: X = (2)(4.1) + 66.57 = 8.2 + 66.57 = 74.77• -2: X = (-2)(4.1) + 66.57 = -8.2 + 66.57 = 58.37• +3.5: X = (3.5)(4.1) + 66.57 = 14.35 + 66.57 = 80.92• -0.5: X = (-0.5)(4.1) + 66.57 = -2.05 + 66.57 = 64.52

XSzX X ))((

Page 29: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Using Z-scores

Page 30: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Uses of Z-Scores

• Describing the relative standing of scores

• Comparing scores from different distributions

• Computing the relative frequency of scores in any distribution

• Describing and interpreting sample means

Page 31: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Uses of Z-Scores

• Describing the relative standing of scores

• Comparing scores from different distributions

• Computing the relative frequency of scores in any distribution

• Describing and interpreting sample means

Page 32: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Distribution• A z-distribution is the distribution produced by

transforming all raw scores in the data into z-scores

• This will not change the shape of the distribution, just the scores on the x-axis

• The advantage of looking at z-scores is the they directly communicate each score’s relative position• z-score = 0• z-score = +1

Page 33: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Distribution of Attractiveness Scores

Raw scores

Page 34: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Distribution of Attractiveness Scores

Z-scores

Page 35: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Distribution of Attractiveness Scores

Z-scores

In a normal distribution, most scores lie between -3 and +3

Page 36: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Characteristics of the Z-Distribution

• A z-distribution always has the same shape as the raw score distribution

• The mean of any z-distribution always equals 0

• The standard deviation of any z-distribution always equals 1

Page 37: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Characteristics of the Z-Distribution

• Because of these characteristics, all normal z-distributions are similar

• A particular z-score will be at the same relative location on every distribution

• Attractiveness: z-score = +1

• Height: z-score = +1

• You should interpret z-scores by imagining their location on the distribution

Page 38: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Uses of Z-Scores

• Describing the relative standing of scores

• Comparing scores from different distributions

• Computing the relative frequency of scores in any distribution

• Describing and interpreting sample means

Page 39: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Using Z-Scores to compare variables

• On your first Stats exam, you get a 21. On your first Abnormal Psych exam you get a 87. How can you compare these two scores?

• The solution is to transform the scores into z-scores, then they can be compared directly• z-scores are often called standard scores

Page 40: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Using Z-Scores to compare variables

• Stats exam, you got 21. Mean = 17, StdDev = 2

• Abnormal exam you got 87. Mean = 85, StdDev = 3

• Stats Z-score: (21-17)/2 = 4/2 = +2

• Abnormal Z-score: (87-85)/2 = 2/3 = +0.67

Page 41: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Comparison of two Z-Distributions

Stats: X=30, Sx=5Millie scored 20Althea scored 38

English: X=40, Sx=10Millie scored 30Althea scored 45

Page 42: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Comparison of two Z-Distributions

Page 43: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Uses of Z-Scores

• Describing the relative standing of scores

• Comparing scores from different distributions

• Computing the relative frequency of scores in any distribution

• Describing and interpreting sample means

Page 44: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Using Z-Scores to compute relative frequency

• Remember your score on the first stats exam:• Stats z-score: (21-17)/2 = 4/2 = +2

• So, you scored 2 standard deviations above the mean

• Can we compute how many scores were better and worse than 2 standard deviations above the mean?

Page 45: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

Page 46: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Relative Frequency

• Relative frequency can be computed using the proportion of the total area under the curve.

• The relative frequency of a particular z-score will be the same on all normal z-distributions.

• The standard normal curve serves as a model for any approximately normal z-distribution

Page 47: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• z-scores for the following heights in the class. – Mean = 66.57, StdDev=4.1

• 65 inches: (65 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -1.57 / 4.1 = -0.38• 66.57 inches: (66.57 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 0 / 4.1 = 0 • 74 inches: (74 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 7.43 / 4.1 = 1.81 • 53 inches: (53 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -13.57 / 4.1 = -3.31 • 62 inches: (62 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -4.57 / 4.1 = -1.11

XSXXz

Page 48: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• z-scores for the following heights in the class.

– Mean = 66.57, StdDev=4.1

• 65 inches: (65 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -1.57 / 4.1 = -0.38• 66.57 inches: (66.57 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 0 / 4.1 = 0 • 74 inches: (74 - 66.57) / 4.1 = 7.43 / 4.1 = 1.81 • 53 inches: (53 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -13.57 / 4.1 = -3.31 • 62 inches: (62 - 66.57) / 4.1 = -4.57 / 4.1 = -1.11

• What are the relative frequencies of these heights?

XSXXz

Page 49: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• How can we find the exact relative frequencies for these z-scores?

• 65 inches: z = -0.38• 66.57 inches: z = 0 • 74 inches: z = 1.81 • 53 inches: z = -3.31 • 62 inches: z = -1.11

Page 50: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• How can we find the exact relative frequencies for these z-scores?

• 65 inches: z = -0.38• 66.57 inches: z = 0 • 74 inches: z = 1.81 • 53 inches: z = -3.31 • 62 inches: z = -1.11

Page 51: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

a

T the

the

T the

Page 52: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

a

a

a

Z = -0.38

Page 53: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

a

a

Z = -0.38

How many scores lie in this portion of the curve?

a

Page 54: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• To find out the relative frequencies for a particular z-score, we use a set of standard tables– z-tables– They’re in the book

Page 55: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009
Page 56: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009
Page 57: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores

• To find out the relative frequencies for a particular z-score, we use a set of standard tables– z-tables

• 65 inches: z = -0.38

Z area between mean & z area beyond z in tail

0.38 0.1480 0.3520

Page 58: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

a

a

Z = -0.380.3520 of scores lie between this z-score and the tail

a

Page 59: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Proportions of Area under the Standard Normal Curve

a

a

Z = -0.38 0.1480 of scores lie between this z-score and the mean

a

Page 60: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores - Your turn

• Find out what percentage of people are taller than the heights given below:– z-tables

• 65 inches: z = -0.38 • 66.57 inches: z = 0 • 74 inches: z = 1.81 • 53 inches: z = -3.31 • 62 inches: z = -1.11

Page 61: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Scores - Your turn

• Find out what percentage of people are taller than the heights given below:– z-tables

• 65 inches: z = -0.38 64.8%• 66.57 inches: z = 0 50%• 74 inches: z = 1.81 3.51%• 53 inches: z = -3.31 99.95%• 62 inches: z = -1.11 86.65%

Page 62: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Using Z-scores to describe sample means

Page 63: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Uses of Z-Scores

• Describing the relative standing of scores

• Comparing scores from different distributions

• Computing the relative frequency of scores in any distribution

• Describing and interpreting sample means

Page 64: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

• We can now describe the relative position of a particular score on a distribution

• What if instead of a single score, we want to see how a particular sample of scores fit on the distribution?

Page 65: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

• For example, we want to know if students who sit in the back score better or worse on exams than others

• Now, we are no longer interested in a single score’s relative distribution, but a sample of scores

• What is the best way to describe a sample?

• So, we want to find the relative position of a sample mean

Page 66: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

• To find the relative position of a sample mean, we need to compare it to a distribution of sample means • just like to find the relative position of a particular score,

we needed to compare it to a distribution of scores

• So first we need to create a new distribution, a distribution of sample means

• How to do this?

Page 67: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

• We want to compare the people in a sample to everyone else

• To create a distribution of sample means, we can select 10 names at random from the population and calculate the mean of this sample• X1 = 3.1

• Do this over and over again, randomly selecting 10 people at a time• X2 = 3.3, X3 = 3.0, X4 = 2.9, X5 = 3.1, X6 = 3.2, etc etc

Page 68: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

a

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Page 69: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

a

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Each score is not a raw score, but is instead a sample mean

a

Page 70: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

• In reality, we cannot infinitely draw samples from our population, but we know what the distribution would be like

• The central limit theorem defines the shape, mean and standard deviation of the sampling distribution

Page 71: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Central Limit Theorem

• The central limit theorem allows us to envision the sampling distribution of means that would be created by exhaustive random sampling of any raw score distribution.

Page 72: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means: Characteristics

• A sampling distribution is approximately normal

• The mean of the sampling distribution () is the same as the mean of the raw scores

• The standard deviation of the sampling distribution (x) is related to the standard deviation of the raw scores

Page 73: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

aa

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Page 74: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

a

Shape of distribution is normal

a

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Page 75: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

a

Mean is the same as raw score mean

a

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Page 76: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means

a

a

SD related to raw score SD

a

2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.9

Page 77: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Standard Error of the Mean

• The standard deviation of the sampling distribution of means is called the standard error of the mean. The formula for the true standard error of the mean is:

NX

X

Page 78: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Standard Error of the Mean - Example

• Estimating Professor’s Age:

• N = 197• Standard deviation () = 4.39

NX

X

Page 79: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Standard Error of the Mean - Example

• N = 197• Standard deviation () = 4.39• Standard error of the mean = 4.39 / √197 = 4.39 /

14.04 = 0.31

NX

X

Page 80: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score Formula for a Sample Mean

• The formula for computing a z-score for a sample mean is:

X

Xz

Page 81: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Z-Score for a Sample Mean - Example

• Mean of population = 36• Mean of sample = 34• Standard error of the mean = 0.31 • Z = (34 - 36) / 0.31 = -2 / 0.31 = -6.45

X

Xz

Page 82: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Sampling Distribution of Means - Why?

• We want to compare the people in sample to everyone else in population

• Creating a sampling distribution gives us a normal distribution with all possible means

• Once we have this, we can determine the relative standing of our sample• use z-scores to find the relative frequency

Page 83: Psych 230 Psychological Measurement and Statistics Pedro Wolf September 16, 2009

Done for today

• Read for next week.• Pick up quizzes at front of class.