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Based on the principles of sample size and relationship strength, diagnose what statistical decision the psychologist should make regarding the null hypothesis for both Pilot Study A and Pilot Study B, and justify each decision based on the likelihood of the findings occurring by chance.
Case context: A developmental psychologist conducts research comparing spatial reasoning skills between children who play action video games and children who do not. The researcher sets up two preliminary pilot studies. Pilot Study A recruits gamers and non-gamers, yielding a strong relationship of Cohen's . Pilot Study B recruits gamers and non-gamers, yielding a weak relationship of Cohen's .
Question: Based on the principles of sample size and relationship strength, diagnose what statistical decision the psychologist should make regarding the null hypothesis for both Pilot Study A and Pilot Study B, and justify each decision based on the likelihood of the findings occurring by chance.
Sample answer: For Pilot Study A, the psychologist should reject the null hypothesis. This decision is justified because a strong relationship of Cohen's in a large sample of participants per group is highly unlikely to occur if the null hypothesis were true. For Pilot Study B, the psychologist should retain the null hypothesis. This decision is justified because a weak relationship of Cohen's in a small sample of participants per group is quite likely to occur by chance alone.
Key points:
- Diagnose that the null hypothesis should be rejected for Pilot Study A.
- Justify Pilot Study A's rejection because a strong relationship () in a large sample ( per group) is highly unlikely to occur by chance.
- Diagnose that the null hypothesis should be retained for Pilot Study B.
- Justify Pilot Study B's retention because a weak relationship () in a small sample ( per group) is likely to occur by chance.
Rubric: The answer must correctly diagnose the null hypothesis decision for both studies: reject the null hypothesis for Pilot Study A and retain it for Pilot Study B. Each decision must be justified by referencing how the combination of sample size and relationship strength affects the likelihood of the result occurring by chance (highly unlikely for Pilot A, likely for Pilot B).
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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