A researcher predicts that students will underestimate their study hours and chooses a one-tailed -test with a critical value of (compared to the two-tailed critical values of ). If the experiment yields a calculated -statistic of , and a follow-up experiment yields a -statistic of , apply the rules of one-tailed testing to determine and justify the outcome for each experiment.
Question: A researcher predicts that students will underestimate their study hours and chooses a one-tailed -test with a critical value of (compared to the two-tailed critical values of ). If the experiment yields a calculated -statistic of , and a follow-up experiment yields a -statistic of , apply the rules of one-tailed testing to determine and justify the outcome for each experiment.
Sample answer: For the first experiment with , the null hypothesis is rejected because the value is more extreme than the critical value of in the predicted direction of underestimation. For the second experiment with , the null hypothesis cannot be rejected because the result is in the opposite direction (positive/overestimation) of the prediction, and a one-tailed test cannot reject the null hypothesis in the opposite direction regardless of its magnitude.
Key points:
- For , the null hypothesis is successfully rejected because the statistic is more extreme than the critical value of in the predicted direction.
- For , the null hypothesis cannot be rejected because the result is in the opposite direction of the predicted underestimation.
- A one-tailed test prohibits rejecting the null hypothesis for results in the unpredicted direction, regardless of how extreme the test statistic is.
Feedback: Under the one-tailed test looking for underestimation (negative values), a calculated exceeds the critical threshold of , allowing rejection of the null hypothesis. However, a calculated is in the opposite direction, so it cannot reject the null hypothesis, even though it exceeds the two-tailed critical value of .
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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