Essay

Explain how stable individual differences (such as variations in participants' nervous systems and muscles) affect the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W) and the resulting FF-ratio in both a between-subjects ANOVA and a repeated-measures ANOVA when measuring a dependent variable like reaction time.

Question: Explain how stable individual differences (such as variations in participants' nervous systems and muscles) affect the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W) and the resulting FF-ratio in both a between-subjects ANOVA and a repeated-measures ANOVA when measuring a dependent variable like reaction time.

Sample answer: In a between-subjects ANOVA, stable individual differences among participants add directly to the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W), which increases the denominator of the FF-ratio and consequently decreases the FF-ratio value. In a repeated-measures ANOVA, these stable individual differences are measured and subtracted from the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W), which decreases MSWMS_W and increases the overall sensitivity of the statistical test.

Key points:

  • Stable individual differences (e.g., nervous system and muscle variations) affect reaction times.
  • In a between-subjects ANOVA, stable individual differences add to the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W).
  • An increased within-groups variance (MSWMS_W) decreases the resulting FF-ratio.
  • In a repeated-measures ANOVA, stable individual differences are measured and subtracted from the within-groups variance (MSWMS_W).
  • Subtracting individual differences from MSWMS_W increases the sensitivity of the repeated-measures ANOVA.

Rubric: The response should be evaluated on the student's ability to recall and explain: 1. That stable individual differences (e.g., in nervous systems and muscles) add to within-groups variance (MSWMS_W) in between-subjects ANOVA. 2. That this addition decreases the FF-ratio. 3. That in repeated-measures ANOVA, individual differences are measured and subtracted from MSWMS_W. 4. That this subtraction increases the sensitivity of the statistical test.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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