Short Answer

A cognitive researcher measures reaction times of 12 participants during a baseline task and a distracted task. To analyze the data using a one-sample tt-test framework, what initial data transformation must the researcher apply to the two sets of reaction times, and what specific hypothetical population mean (μ0\mu_0) will the resulting mean difference be compared against?

Question: A cognitive researcher measures reaction times of 12 participants during a baseline task and a distracted task. To analyze the data using a one-sample tt-test framework, what initial data transformation must the researcher apply to the two sets of reaction times, and what specific hypothetical population mean (μ0\mu_0) will the resulting mean difference be compared against?

Sample answer: The researcher must subtract each participant's baseline reaction time from their distracted reaction time (or vice versa) to convert the paired measurements into a single difference score for each participant. The resulting sample mean difference will be compared against a hypothetical population mean (μ0\mu_0) of 00.

Key points:

  • Subtracting the paired reaction times for each participant to obtain difference scores.
  • Collapsing the paired measurements into a single distribution.
  • Evaluating the mean difference score against a hypothetical population mean (μ0\mu_0) of 00.

Rubric: A complete answer must state that: 1. The researcher needs to subtract the paired reaction times for each participant to create a single difference score. 2. The resulting mean difference will be compared against a hypothetical population mean of 0.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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