Short Answer

A researcher obtains a non-significant result from their one-way ANOVA (p=.25p = .25) comparing three therapy groups, but notices a large difference between two group means. If they want to perform post hoc pairwise comparisons, can they apply Fisher's Least Significant Difference (LSD) test to evaluate this difference? Justify your decision based on the requirements of the test.

Question: A researcher obtains a non-significant result from their one-way ANOVA (p=.25p = .25) comparing three therapy groups, but notices a large difference between two group means. If they want to perform post hoc pairwise comparisons, can they apply Fisher's Least Significant Difference (LSD) test to evaluate this difference? Justify your decision based on the requirements of the test.

Sample answer: No, the researcher cannot apply Fisher's LSD test in this scenario. Fisher's LSD is a post hoc comparison procedure that is utilized specifically after obtaining a significant one-way ANOVA result. Since the researcher's ANOVA result is non-significant (p=.25p = .25), they do not meet the prerequisite for conducting this test.

Key points:

  • Fisher's LSD requires a significant one-way ANOVA result to be performed.
  • The researcher cannot apply Fisher's LSD because the overall ANOVA result is non-significant (p=.25p = .25).
  • Fisher's LSD is a post hoc comparison procedure used only after obtaining a significant one-way ANOVA result.

Rubric:

  1. Correctly states that the researcher cannot apply Fisher's LSD because the overall one-way ANOVA result is non-significant (5 points). 2. Explains that Fisher's LSD requires a significant one-way ANOVA result as a prerequisite for post hoc comparisons (5 points).

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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