Wednesday, June 8, 2011

graphs for "relationship between DV and IV"

I was under the impression that you only have to look at one graph (the same scatterplot that you check homoscedasticity and Independence of Error Assumptions) in order to check for the assumption of the correct relationship between the DV and each IV. However, as I look at the power points from class, it says that we ares uppposed to plot the residuals on tY axis and the predicted values on the X axis, and that we are also supposed to plot the residuals on the y axis and EACH IV on the X axis. Does this mean that we need to show ALL of the graphs in our final project assignment?

Final Project - Results

Hi Guys,

Are we supposed to write up our transformed results for the results section, or our original data? I'm not sure.... thanks!

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Assumptions (cont.)

Normality of Residuals: you can check this by clicking the "Plots" button in your regression window and checking the two boxes (Histogram and Normal Probability Plot) in "Standardized Residual Plots."

Independence of Residuals (cont.): the same residual vs. predicted plot that you used for "homoscedasticity" and "correct relationship between DV and IV" can be a rough way of testing this. But another (I think better) way would be to make a boxplot similar to Figure 4.4.6 (C) on p. 135 of the text.

To do that:
1) create a residual variable.
a) in your linear regression window, click "Save"
b) check the box for "Standardized" under "Residuals."
c) run the analysis

2) go to Graph --> Chart Builder --> Boxplot --> Clustered Boxplot.

Now you can put the "Standardized Residual" on the Y axis, a categorical variable in the X axis clustered by another categorical variable. The medians should be similar if there is independence of residuals.

Technically, you could also transform height into a categorical variable to cluster around, but you guys are probably getting exhausted already. So don't worry about it.

You wouldn't have to worry about serial dependency because this is cross-sectional data.

Please ask if you have more questions.

Good luck!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Assumptions

Hey guys,

Here are some responses to questions we've received about the assumptions you should be testing for:

  • All relevant IVs are included in the model: this is based on theory, so you will not have a statistical output to "prove" that this assumption has not been violated. However, you should be able to explain that the relevant IVs (that pertain to your hypothesis and what you are testing/researching) are included and measured well.

  • No measurement errors in the IV's: Again, this is done prior to the data collection. You want to make sure that the measures used to assess the IVs are reliable and valid.

  • NOTE: Dr. Kim has not asked you to write up anything about the two assumptions above on your final project. However, they are important to consider in all future research.

  • The relationships between IVs and DV are correctly specified: See the comments provided by David on Diana's questions about the final project (Thurs, June 2). You will be able to see a clear violation if one exists for this project.

  • Independence of errors: check this with the residual and predicted plot….and Dr. Kim said “Basically, you don't want to see any specific pattern among the residuals that should be randomly distributed around the zero line.

  • Homoscedasticity: Create a scatterplot with the ZPRED and ZRESID and see if there is a pattern of systematic error. See the notes and powerpoints.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Assumptions

How do I create a graph to check for the assumption of Independence of Errors?

Friday, June 3, 2011

Question on order of IVs

In this final project we are unsure of what doctor kim is looking for with which variable to be entered first. Smoking is the IV we are looking at so it should be entered first, but it also states that the other variables (gender, height etc.) are accounted for. Does this mean that we should enter the variables accounted for first or the most important (smoking). Also, I am enetering the height and age in the same block. Is this what is supposed to happen?

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Final Project

Do we need to attach the SPSS output for the final project?

Also, what graph do we look at for assumption 3 (relationship between IVs and DV)?

Monday, May 23, 2011

Question on Article Review

Hi. On one of my article reviews a TA made a comment that in 5th the "th" should not be in superscript... is it just normal then as shown here, or is "th" not supposed to be included at all?

Thank you for your help!

Brooke

Monday, May 16, 2011

Hi, a few of the others and I were confused on which order the IVs should be entered. Some argued 1 to 3, because it says "addition", and some argued 3 to 1, because age and gender were "over and above". Thank you.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Article Reviews

Hi Guys,

Are we allowed to do one theoretical article review like we were in ANOVA?

Thanks,

Brooke

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

EXAM 2 REVIEW SESSION

David will be holding a review session for Exam 2 today, Tuesday, May 3 from 3-4 PM. It will be in Room 314 of the SOP building.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

HW 2

For homework #2, question 4, can we simply paste the table that the info is in, or would you like us to extract it from the table and report it separately?

Thank you!

Brooke

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Questions on HW1

Hi! I have two questions:

1.) For the scatterplots, would you like us to distinguish the groups and have the lowess and least squares lines fit the groups or the overall?

2.) Is there a way to compute covariance and correlation on SPSS or are we supposed to do it by hand?

Thanks!

Brooke

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Homework #1

I hope you are having a good weekend! A few of us were talking and we are a little confused about when Homework #1 is due. Did we decided to keep it due on Monday? Or did it change to Wednesday?

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Exam Review Session

Hey guys!

We will be holding a review session for Exam #1. It will be on Tuesday, April 12 from 10-11 AM in Room 311.

See you there!