Produktbild: Introductory Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Introductory Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Fr. 203.00

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

07.10.2025

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

480

Maße (L/B/H)

27.4/21.9/2.3 cm

Gewicht

1162 g

Auflage

8th edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-394-23473-8

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

07.10.2025

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

480

Maße (L/B/H)

27.4/21.9/2.3 cm

Gewicht

1162 g

Auflage

8th edition

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-394-23473-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Introductory Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences
  • Preface xi

    Acknowledgments xv

    Glossary of Symbols xvii

    Part I Descriptive Statistics 1

    Chapter 1 Introduction 3

    Why Study Statistics? 4

    Descriptive and Inferential Statistics 5

    Populations, Samples, Parameters, and Statistics 5

    Measurement Scales 6

    Independent and Dependent Variables 8

    Summation Notation 10

    Jackson's Study 14

    Summary 15

    Exercises 16

    Thought Questions 19

    Computer Exercises 19

    Bridge to SPSS 20

    Chapter 2 Frequency Distributions and Graphs 22

    Purpose of Descriptive Statistics 23

    Regular Frequency Distributions 23

    Cumulative Frequency Distributions 25

    Grouped Frequency Distributions 27

    Real and Apparent Limits 28

    Graphic Representations 29

    Skewing of Frequency Distributions 32

    Summary 34

    Exercises 35

    Thought Questions 36

    Computer Exercises 37

    Bridge to SPSS 37

    Chapter 3 Measures of Central Tendency and Variability 40

    Introduction 41

    The Mode 42

    The Median 43

    The Mean 44

    The Concept of Variability 47

    The Range 49

    The Standard Deviation and Variance 50

    Summary 55

    Exercises 57

    Thought Questions 58

    Computer Exercises 58

    Bridge to SPSS 59

    Chapter 4 Standardized Scores and the Normal Distribution 61

    Interpreting a Raw Score Revisited 62

    Rules for Changing ¿ and ¿ 63

    Standard Scores (z-Scores) 64
    T Scores, SAT Scores, and IQ Scores 67

    The Normal Distribution 68

    Table of the Standard Normal Distribution 70

    Illustrative Examples 71

    Summary 77

    Exercises 78

    Thought Questions 80

    Computer Exercises 80

    Bridge to SPSS 81

    Part II Basic Inferential Statistics 83

    Chapter 5 Introduction to Statistical Inference 85

    Introduction 86

    The Goals of Inferential Statistics 87

    Sampling Distributions 87

    The Standard Error of the Mean 93

    The z-Score for Sample Means 95

    Null Hypothesis Testing 96

    Assumptions Required by the Statistical Test for the Mean of a Single Population 103

    Why is Null Hypothesis Testing So Misunderstood? 104

    Summary 105

    Exercises 107

    Thought Questions 108

    Computer Exercises 108

    Bridge to SPSS 109

    Chapter 6 One-Sample t Test and Interval Estimation 110

    Introduction 110

    Statistical Test for the Mean of a Single Population When ¿ Is Not Known: The t Distributions 111

    Interval Estimation 115

    Computation 116

    Working with Proportions 118

    Summary 121

    Exercises 122

    Thought Questions 123

    Computer Exercises 123

    Bridge to SPSS 124

    Chapter 7 Testing Hypotheses About the Difference Between the Means of Two Populations 126

    The Standard Error of the Difference 127

    Estimating the Standard Error of the Difference 130

    The t Test for Two Independent Sample Means 131

    Confidence Intervals for ¿ 1 ¿ ¿ 2 135

    Measuring the Size of an Effect for a Difference Between Two Independent Samples 136

    Reporting the Results of a t Test with a CI and a Measure of Effect Size 137

    The Assumptions Underlying the Proper Use of the t Test for Two Sample Means 138

    The t Test for Matched Samples 140

    Summary 146

    Exercises 148

    Thought Questions 150

    Computer Exercises 151

    Bridge to SPSS 151

    Chapter 8 Nonparametric Tests for the Difference Between Two Means 155

    Introduction 156

    The Difference Between the Locations of Two Independent Samples: The Rank-Sum Test 159

    The Difference Between the Locations of Two Matched Samples: The Wilcoxon Test 163

    Summary 167

    Exercises 169

    Thought Questions 172

    Computer Exercises 172

    Bridge to SPSS 172

    Chapter 9 Linear Correlation 175

    Introduction 176

    Describing the Linear Relationship Between Two Variables 178

    Interpreting the Magnitude of a Pearson r 184

    When Is It Important That Pearson's r Be Large? 190

    Testing the Significance of the Correlation Coefficient 191

    The Relationship Between Two Ranked Variables: The Spearman Rank-Order Correlation Coefficient 192

    Summary 195

    Exercises 196

    Thought Questions 199

    Computer Exercises 200

    Bridge to SPSS 200

    Appendix: Equivalence of the Various Formulas for r 203

    Chapter 10 Prediction and Linear Regression 205

    Introduction 206

    Using Linear Regression to Make Predictions 206

    Measuring Prediction Error: The Standard Error of Estimate 212

    The Connection Between Correlation and the t Test 214

    Estimating the Proportion of Variance Accounted for in the Population 219

    Summary 220

    Exercises 222

    Thought Questions 224

    Computer Exercises 224

    Bridge to SPSS 225

    Chapter 11 Introduction to Power Analysis 228

    Introduction 229

    Concepts of Power Analysis 230

    Power Analysis for the Mean of a Single Population 231

    Power Analysis for the Proportion of a Single Population 235

    Power Analysis for a Pearson r 236

    Power Analysis for the Difference Between Independent Means 237

    Power Analysis for the Difference Between the Means of Two Matched Populations 241

    Choosing a Value for d for a Power Analysis Involving Independent Means 242

    Using Power Analysis Concepts to Interpret the Results of Null Hypothesis Tests 243

    The Null Hypothesis Testing Controversy Revisited 244

    Summary 245

    Exercises 248

    Thought Questions 250

    Computer Exercises 250

    Bridge to SPSS 251

    Chapter 12 Beyond Traditional Null Hypothesis Testing 254

    More on Criticisms of NHT (and Some Rebuttals) 254

    Improving NHT with Robust Statistics 257

    p Hacking, HARKing, and the "File Drawer Problem" 260

    The Replication Crisis in Psychological Research and Possible Solutions 262

    Alternatives to NHT (The "New" Statistics) 264

    Summary 266

    Thought Questions 267

    Appendix: A Brief Introduction to the Use of Bayesian Statistics 268

    Part III Analysis of Variance Methods 271

    Chapter 13 One-Way Analysis of Variance 273

    Introduction 274

    The General Logic of ANOVA 275

    Computational Procedures 278

    Testing the F Ratio for Statistical Significance 281

    Calculating the One-Way ANOVA From Means and Standard Deviations 282

    Comparing the One-Way ANOVA With the t Test 284

    A Simplified ANOVA Formula for Equal Sample Sizes 284

    Effect Size for the One-Way ANOVA 285

    Some Comments on the Use of ANOVA 287

    A Nonparametric Alternative to the One-Way ANOVA: The Kruskal-Wallis H Test 289

    Summary 291

    Exercises 294

    Thought Questions 297

    Computer Exercises 297

    Bridge to SPSS 297

    Appendix: Proof That the Total Sum of Squares Is Equal to the Sum of the Between-Group and the Within-Group Sum of Squares 301

    Chapter 14 Multiple Comparisons 302

    Introduction 303

    Fisher's Protected t Tests and the Least Significant Difference (LSD) 303

    Tukey's Honestly Significant Difference (HSD) 307

    Other Multiple Comparison Procedures 310

    Planned and Complex Comparisons 311

    Nonparametric Multiple Comparisons: The Protected Rank-Sum Test 313

    Summary 314

    Exercises 315

    Thought Questions 316

    Computer Exercises 316

    Bridge to SPSS 317

    Chapter 15 Introduction to Factorial Design: Two-Way Analysis of Variance 319

    Introduction 320

    Computational Procedures 321

    The Meaning of Interaction 328

    Following Up on a Significant Interaction 330

    Measuring Effect Size in a Factorial ANOVA 332

    Summary 333

    Exercises 337

    Thought Questions 339

    Computer Exercises 339

    Bridge to SPSS 340

    Chapter 16 Repeated-Measures ANOVA 344

    Introduction 345

    Calculating the One-Way RM ANOVA 345

    Rationale for the RM ANOVA Error Term 348

    Assumptions and Other Considerations Involving the RM ANOVA 349

    The RM Versus RB Design: An Introduction to the Issues of Experimental Design 351

    The Two-Way Mixed Design 354

    Summary 359

    Exercises 363

    Thought Questions 365

    Computer Exercises 365

    Bridge to SPSS 365

    Part IV Nonparametric Statistics for Categorical Data 371

    Chapter 17 Probability of Discrete Events and the Binomial Distribution 373

    Introduction 373

    Probability 374

    The Binomial Distribution 377

    The Sign Test for Matched Samples 381

    Summary 382

    Exercises 383

    Exercises 385

    Computer Exercises 385

    Bridge to SPSS 385

    Chapter 18 Chi-Square Tests 389

    Introduction 389

    Chi-Square and the Goodness of Fit: One-Variable Problems 390

    Chi-Square as a Test of Independence: Two-Variable Problems 394

    Measures of Strength of Association in Two-Variable Tables 399

    Summary 401

    Exercises 402

    Thought Questions 404

    Computer Exercises 404

    Bridge to SPSS 405

    Appendix 409

    Statistical Tables 411

    Answer Key 426

    Data from Jackson's Experiment 434

    Glossary of Terms 435

    References 444

    Index 000