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Based on the provided comparisons, explain the difference in critical values between one-tailed and two-tailed -tests, and recall the consequences of these differences when a sample mean deviates in the predicted versus the unexpected direction.
Question: Based on the provided comparisons, explain the difference in critical values between one-tailed and two-tailed -tests, and recall the consequences of these differences when a sample mean deviates in the predicted versus the unexpected direction.
Sample answer: A one-tailed test has a less extreme critical value than a two-tailed test, which provides a better chance of rejecting the null hypothesis if the observed difference aligns with the predicted direction. However, if the sample mean differs in the unexpected direction, a one-tailed test offers zero chance of rejecting the null hypothesis, unlike a two-tailed test which can detect effects in either direction.
Key points:
- A one-tailed test has a less extreme critical value than a two-tailed test.
- A one-tailed test provides a better chance of rejecting the null hypothesis in the predicted direction.
- A one-tailed test provides zero chance of rejecting the null hypothesis if the difference is in the unexpected direction.
- A two-tailed test is capable of detecting and rejecting the null hypothesis for effects in either direction.
Rubric: The response must accurately state that a one-tailed test has a less extreme critical value compared to a two-tailed test. It must also correctly recall that a one-tailed test increases the chance of rejecting the null hypothesis in the predicted direction, but provides zero chance of rejecting it if the outcome is in the unexpected direction, whereas a two-tailed test can detect effects in either direction.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Example of Changing from a Two-Tailed to a One-Tailed -Test
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