Deck 10: Introduction to Hypothesis Testing: Using the Sign Test

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Question
If the alpha level is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, what effect does it have on beta?

A) beta decreases
B) beta increases
C) beta is unaffected
D) cannot be determined
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Question
If alpha is 0.05 and obtained probability level is 0.01, you could be making a _________.

A) Type II error or correct decision
B) Type II error or a Type I error
C) Type I error or a correct decision
D) all of these
Question
If you retain the null hypothesis, you may be making _________.

A) a Type II error
B) a Type I error
C) a correct decision
D) a Type II error and a correct decision
E) a Type I error and a correct decision
Question
The null hypothesis which is appropriate for a directional alternative hypothesis asserts that _________.

A) the independent variable has had no effect
B) chance alone is responsible for the differences between conditions
C) the independent variable does not have an effect in the direction predicted by H 1
D) b and c
Question
If we set alpha at 0.05 instead of 0.01 _________.

A) we have a greater risk of a Type I error
B) we have a greater risk of a Type II error
C) we have a lesser risk of a Type II error
D) we have a greater risk of a Type I error and we have a lesser risk of a Type II error
Question
It is important to know the possible errors (Type I or Type II) we might make when rejecting or retaining H 0 _________.

A) to minimize these errors when designing the experiment
B) to be aware of the fallacy of "accepting H 0 "
C) to maximize the probability of making a correct decision by proper design
D) all of these
Question
When the results of an experiment are nonsignificant, the proper conclusion(s) is (are) _________.

A) the experiment fails to show a real effect for the independent variable
B) chance alone is at work
C) accept H 0
D) accept H 1
E) the independent variable has no effect
Question
In stating H 0 and H 1 , one must be certain that they are _________.

A) mutually exclusive
B) independent
C) exhaustive
D) a series of N trials
E) mutually exclusive and exhaustive
Question
If you reject the null hypothesis, you may be making _________.

A) a Type II error
B) a Type I error
C) a correct decision
D) a Type II error and a correct decision
E) a Type I error and a correct decision
Question
Using the sign test, if the null hypothesis is false, then P (the probability of a plus) _________.

A) equals 0.50
B) equals alpha
C) equals beta
D) is not equal to 0.50
Question
lf alpha is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, _________.

A) the probability of a Type II error decreases
B) the probability of a Type I error increases
C) the error probabilities stay the same the probability we will retain a false H 0 increases
D) the probability we will retain a false H 0 increases
Question
In the repeated measures design, _________.

A) differences between paired scores are analyzed
B) the raw scores in each condition are analyzed separately
C) we must use a directional alternative hypothesis
D) all of these
Question
In an experiment with a repeated measures design _________.

A) the entire experiment is done twice
B) one group of subjects receives one treatment, the other group receives another treatment
C) the same subjects receive both treatments
D) none of these
Question
The statistic used in the sign test measures _________.

A) the difference between the means of the two groups
B) the direction of the differences between pairs of scores
C) the magnitude of the differences between pairs of scores
D) the difference between the variance of the two groups
Question
The nondirectional alternative hypothesis asserts that _________.

A) the results of the experiment were due to chance alone
B) no conclusions can be drawn from the experiment
C) the independent variable has an effect
D) the independent variable has no effect
Question
An alpha level of 0.05 indicates that _________.

A) if H 0 is true, the probability of falsely rejecting it is limited to 0.05
B) 95% of the time, chance is operating
C) the probability of a Type II error is 0.05
D) the probability of a correct decision is 0.05
Question
If alpha equals 0.05 and the probability level of your experiment is 0.04, you would _________.

A) reject the null hypothesis
B) retain the null hypothesis
C) accept the null hypothesis
D) redo the experiment
Question
In an experiment involving a nondirectional alternative hypothesis, the obtained result was 7 pluses and 1 minus. To evaluate the null hypothesis, which of the following probabilities would you use?

A) p (7)
B) p (7) + p (8)
C) p (0) + p (1) + p (7) + p (8)
D) p (1) + p (7)
Question
If the alternative hypothesis states that alcohol affects short-term memory, the null hypothesis states _________.

A) alcohol does not decrease short-term memory
B) alcohol has no effect on short-term memory
C) alcohol decreases short-term memory
D) P ≠ Q
Question
In the sign test, if the null hypothesis is true, then P _________.

A) equals 0.50
B) is greater than 0.50
C) is less than 0.50
D) differs depending on H 1
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   Using a = 0.05 2 tail , your conclusion is _________.</strong> A) accept H 0 ; hypnosis has no affect on brain dominance B) retain H 0 ; we cannot conclude that hypnosis affects brain dominance C) reject H 0 ; hypnosis affects brain dominance D) change H 0 <div style=padding-top: 35px> Using a = 0.05 2 tail , your conclusion is _________.

A) accept H 0 ; hypnosis has no affect on brain dominance
B) retain H 0 ; we cannot conclude that hypnosis affects brain dominance
C) reject H 0 ; hypnosis affects brain dominance
D) change H 0
Question
If a = 0.05 1 tail and the obtained result has a probability of 0.01 and is in the opposite direction to that predicted by H 1 , we conclude by _________.

A) rejecting H 0
B) retaining H 0
C) accepting H 1
D) accepting H 0
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The null hypothesis appropriate for a nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.</strong> A) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance C) hypnosis does not increase left brain dominance D) hypnosis affects brain dominance <div style=padding-top: 35px> The null hypothesis appropriate for a nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.

A) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance
B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance
C) hypnosis does not increase left brain dominance
D) hypnosis affects brain dominance
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.</strong> A) hypnosis affects brain dominance B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance C) hypnosis increases right brain dominance D) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance <div style=padding-top: 35px> The nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.

A) hypnosis affects brain dominance
B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance
C) hypnosis increases right brain dominance
D) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The obtained probability = _________.</strong> A) 0.0161 B) 0.0384 C) 0.0192 D) 0.0322 <div style=padding-top: 35px> The obtained probability = _________.

A) 0.0161
B) 0.0384
C) 0.0192
D) 0.0322
Question
If p (obtained) from an experiment equals 0.05 and alpha equals 0.05 (both two-tailed), what would you conclude?

A) reject H0
B) retain H0
C) reject H1
D) retain H1
Question
If the alpha level is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, what effect does this have on beta?

A) beta decreases
B) beta increases
C) beta is unaffected
D) cannot be determined
Question
lf we drew a random sample from an introductory psychology class, to whom could we generalize our results?

A) all of human kind
B) the university
C) all psychology students
D) the students in that introductory psychology class
Question
If you reject the null hypothesis, what type of error might you be making?

A) Type I
B) Type II
C) Type III
D) cannot be determined
Question
When the results are statistically significant, this means _________.

A) the obtained probability is equal to or less than alpha
B) the independent variable has had a large effect
C) we can reject H 0
D) the obtained probability is equal to or less than alpha and we can reject H 0
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   If you conclude to reject H <sub>0</sub>, the error(s) you may be making is(are) _________.</strong> A) a Type I error B) a Type II error C) that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance D) a Type I error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance E) a Type II error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance <div style=padding-top: 35px> If you conclude to reject H 0, the error(s) you may be making is(are) _________.

A) a Type I error
B) a Type II error
C) that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
D) a Type I error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
E) a Type II error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
Question
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The population to which these results apply is _________.</strong> A) all students B) the 12 students in the experiment C) the freshman class D) all adults <div style=padding-top: 35px> The population to which these results apply is _________.

A) all students
B) the 12 students in the experiment
C) the freshman class
D) all adults
Question
The alpha level _________.

A) is always set at 0.05 or 0.01
B) is set after the data are analyzed
C) is determined by the consequences of making a Type I and Type II error
D) depends on N
Question
If you reject H0 when H0 is false, you have made a _________.

A) Type I error
B) Type II error
C) correct decision
D) none of these
Question
Using the sign test, if (1) H 1 is directional, (2) H 0 is false, (3) a = 0.01, and (4) N = 12, then the probability of making a Type I error equals _________.

A) 0.0002
B) 0.0010
C) 0
D) 0.0192
Question
The sign test can be used for _________.

A) a repeated measures design
B) a replicated measures design
C) a correlated measures design
D) all of these
Question
If the result of an experiment is statistically significant, this means _________.

A) the result is reliable
B) the result is important
C) if we repeat the experiment, we expect the result to be significant again
D) the result is reliable and if we repeat the experiment, we expect the result to be significant again
Question
If we set alpha at 0.05 instead of 0.01, other factors held constant _________.

A) greater risk of a Type I error and a lower risk of a Type II error
B) greater risk of a Type I error and a greater risk of a Type II error
C) a lower risk of a Type I error and a greater risk of a Type II error
D) a lower risk of a Type I error and a lower risk of a Type II error
Question
Using the sign test, with N = 15 and a = 0.05 2-tail , if H 0 is true, the probability of making a type I error equals _________.

A) 0.0042
B) 0
C) 0.05
D) 0.0352
E) none of these
Question
If alpha equals 0.05, how many times out of 100 would you expect to reject the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is in fact true?

A) 1
B) 0.05
C) 0.01
D) 5
Question
If the results of an experiment allow rejection of the null hypothesis, _________.

A) the effect of the independent variable must be large.
B) similar results are likely to occur if the experiment is repeated
C) the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
D) the effect of the independent variable must be large and the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
E) similar results are likely to occur if the experiment is repeated and the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
Question
Using the sign test, and excluding ties, if H 0 is true the sample data must have half pluses and half minuses.
Question
The sign test analyzes both the magnitude and direction of the data.
Question
If H 0 is true and we reject it, we have made a Type I error.
Question
The alternative hypothesis must be nondirectional.
Question
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What type error might you be making using a = 0.05 2 tail ?</strong> A) Type I B) Type II C) Type III D) cannot be determined <div style=padding-top: 35px> What type error might you be making using a = 0.05 2 tail ?

A) Type I
B) Type II
C) Type III
D) cannot be determined
Question
Regardless of whether H 1 is directional or nondirectional, when evaluating H 0 we always assume chance is responsible for the differences in results between conditions.
Question
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What would you conclude using a = 0.01 2 tail ?</strong> A) reject H<sub>0</sub> B) accept H<sub>0</sub> C) retain H<sub>0</sub> D) fail to reject H<sub>1</sub> E) accept or retain H<sub>0</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px> What would you conclude using a = 0.01 2 tail ?

A) reject H0
B) accept H0
C) retain H0
D) fail to reject H1
E) accept or retain H0
Question
We always evaluate the tail of the distribution, beginning with the obtained result, rather than just the obtained result itself.
Question
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   In a two-tailed test of H<sub>0</sub> using a = 0.05, what is p (obtained) for the results shown?</strong> A) 0.0500 B) 0.0108 C) 0.1094 D) 0.0216 <div style=padding-top: 35px> In a two-tailed test of H0 using a = 0.05, what is p (obtained) for the results shown?

A) 0.0500
B) 0.0108
C) 0.1094
D) 0.0216
Question
If H 0 is false, and we retain it, we have made a Type II error.
Question
We always evaluate just the specific result obtained in the experiment.
Question
We always directly evaluate H 1 when analyzing the data.
Question
The value used for alpha depends on the consequences of making a Type I and Type II error.
Question
One can say it is always preferable to make a Type II error.

A) True
B) False
C) It depends on the costs of making a Type I or Type II error
D) None of these
Question
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What is your conclusion regarding H<sub>0</sub> using a = 0.05<sub>2 tailed</sub>.</strong> A) reject H<sub>0</sub> B) accept H<sub>0</sub> C) retain H<sub>0</sub> D) retain H<sub>1</sub> E) accept or retain H<sub>0</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px> What is your conclusion regarding H0 using a = 0.052 tailed.

A) reject H0
B) accept H0
C) retain H0
D) retain H1
E) accept or retain H0
Question
In a nondirectional alternative hypothesis, evaluating the probability of observing 7 pluses out of 8 events equals _________.

A) p (7)
B) p (7) + p (8)
C) p (0) + p (1) + p (7) + p (8)
D) p (0) + p (8)
Question
For any given obtained result, a one tail p-level is

A) appropriate to use no matter what the alternative hypothesis states.
B) less than the two tail p-level
C) is appropriate to use only if the alternative hypothesis is directional
D) is appropriate to use only if the null hypothesis is nondirectional
E) less than the two tail p-level and is appropriate to use only if the alternative hypothesis is directional.
Question
It is always appropriate to use a directional alternative hypothesis.
Question
If H 0 is false and we reject it, we have made a Type II error.
Question
If H 0 is validly rejected, H 1 must be true.
Question
If H 0 is true, beta equals 0.00.
Question
It is impossible to get 20 pluses out of 20 pairs of scores in a replicated measures design due to chance alone.
Question
It is permissible to use a directional H 1 when there are good theoretical as well as strong supporting data to justify the predicted direction.
Question
H0 always asserts that the dependent variable has no effect on the independent variable.
Question
It is always appropriate to use a directional H 1 .
Question
Unless the very same subject is used in the control and experimental condition the design cannot be a replicated measures design.
Question
It is technically correct to conclude by "accepting" rather than "failing to reject" H 0 .
Question
The sign test analyzes raw scores.
Question
A replicated measures design is the same thing as a correlated groups design.
Question
H 1 and H 0, taken together, cover the entire continuum with regard to possible effects of the independent variable.
Question
The statement "Drug X has no effect on Y and any observed effect is due to chance alone" is an example of a nondirectional alternative hypothesis.
Question
If alpha is made more stringent, beta increases.
Question
The sign test is used with the replicated measures design.
Question
It is impossible to prove with certainty the truth of H 1 when using sample data.
Question
If the result turns out to be in the direction opposite to a directional H 1 , we must conclude by retaining H 0 .
Question
H0 and H1 must be mutually exclusive and exhaustive.
Question
The sign test ignores the magnitude of the difference scores.
Question
It is not possible to analyze the probability of the alternative hypothesis because the laws of probability are derived for chance events. This is why we test H0 instead of H1 .
Question
If results are statistically significant, the independent variable must have had a large effect.
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Deck 10: Introduction to Hypothesis Testing: Using the Sign Test
1
If the alpha level is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, what effect does it have on beta?

A) beta decreases
B) beta increases
C) beta is unaffected
D) cannot be determined
beta increases
2
If alpha is 0.05 and obtained probability level is 0.01, you could be making a _________.

A) Type II error or correct decision
B) Type II error or a Type I error
C) Type I error or a correct decision
D) all of these
Type I error or a correct decision
3
If you retain the null hypothesis, you may be making _________.

A) a Type II error
B) a Type I error
C) a correct decision
D) a Type II error and a correct decision
E) a Type I error and a correct decision
a Type II error and a correct decision
4
The null hypothesis which is appropriate for a directional alternative hypothesis asserts that _________.

A) the independent variable has had no effect
B) chance alone is responsible for the differences between conditions
C) the independent variable does not have an effect in the direction predicted by H 1
D) b and c
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5
If we set alpha at 0.05 instead of 0.01 _________.

A) we have a greater risk of a Type I error
B) we have a greater risk of a Type II error
C) we have a lesser risk of a Type II error
D) we have a greater risk of a Type I error and we have a lesser risk of a Type II error
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6
It is important to know the possible errors (Type I or Type II) we might make when rejecting or retaining H 0 _________.

A) to minimize these errors when designing the experiment
B) to be aware of the fallacy of "accepting H 0 "
C) to maximize the probability of making a correct decision by proper design
D) all of these
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7
When the results of an experiment are nonsignificant, the proper conclusion(s) is (are) _________.

A) the experiment fails to show a real effect for the independent variable
B) chance alone is at work
C) accept H 0
D) accept H 1
E) the independent variable has no effect
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8
In stating H 0 and H 1 , one must be certain that they are _________.

A) mutually exclusive
B) independent
C) exhaustive
D) a series of N trials
E) mutually exclusive and exhaustive
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9
If you reject the null hypothesis, you may be making _________.

A) a Type II error
B) a Type I error
C) a correct decision
D) a Type II error and a correct decision
E) a Type I error and a correct decision
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10
Using the sign test, if the null hypothesis is false, then P (the probability of a plus) _________.

A) equals 0.50
B) equals alpha
C) equals beta
D) is not equal to 0.50
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11
lf alpha is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, _________.

A) the probability of a Type II error decreases
B) the probability of a Type I error increases
C) the error probabilities stay the same the probability we will retain a false H 0 increases
D) the probability we will retain a false H 0 increases
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12
In the repeated measures design, _________.

A) differences between paired scores are analyzed
B) the raw scores in each condition are analyzed separately
C) we must use a directional alternative hypothesis
D) all of these
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13
In an experiment with a repeated measures design _________.

A) the entire experiment is done twice
B) one group of subjects receives one treatment, the other group receives another treatment
C) the same subjects receive both treatments
D) none of these
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14
The statistic used in the sign test measures _________.

A) the difference between the means of the two groups
B) the direction of the differences between pairs of scores
C) the magnitude of the differences between pairs of scores
D) the difference between the variance of the two groups
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15
The nondirectional alternative hypothesis asserts that _________.

A) the results of the experiment were due to chance alone
B) no conclusions can be drawn from the experiment
C) the independent variable has an effect
D) the independent variable has no effect
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16
An alpha level of 0.05 indicates that _________.

A) if H 0 is true, the probability of falsely rejecting it is limited to 0.05
B) 95% of the time, chance is operating
C) the probability of a Type II error is 0.05
D) the probability of a correct decision is 0.05
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17
If alpha equals 0.05 and the probability level of your experiment is 0.04, you would _________.

A) reject the null hypothesis
B) retain the null hypothesis
C) accept the null hypothesis
D) redo the experiment
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18
In an experiment involving a nondirectional alternative hypothesis, the obtained result was 7 pluses and 1 minus. To evaluate the null hypothesis, which of the following probabilities would you use?

A) p (7)
B) p (7) + p (8)
C) p (0) + p (1) + p (7) + p (8)
D) p (1) + p (7)
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19
If the alternative hypothesis states that alcohol affects short-term memory, the null hypothesis states _________.

A) alcohol does not decrease short-term memory
B) alcohol has no effect on short-term memory
C) alcohol decreases short-term memory
D) P ≠ Q
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20
In the sign test, if the null hypothesis is true, then P _________.

A) equals 0.50
B) is greater than 0.50
C) is less than 0.50
D) differs depending on H 1
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21
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   Using a = 0.05 2 tail , your conclusion is _________.</strong> A) accept H 0 ; hypnosis has no affect on brain dominance B) retain H 0 ; we cannot conclude that hypnosis affects brain dominance C) reject H 0 ; hypnosis affects brain dominance D) change H 0 Using a = 0.05 2 tail , your conclusion is _________.

A) accept H 0 ; hypnosis has no affect on brain dominance
B) retain H 0 ; we cannot conclude that hypnosis affects brain dominance
C) reject H 0 ; hypnosis affects brain dominance
D) change H 0
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22
If a = 0.05 1 tail and the obtained result has a probability of 0.01 and is in the opposite direction to that predicted by H 1 , we conclude by _________.

A) rejecting H 0
B) retaining H 0
C) accepting H 1
D) accepting H 0
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23
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The null hypothesis appropriate for a nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.</strong> A) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance C) hypnosis does not increase left brain dominance D) hypnosis affects brain dominance The null hypothesis appropriate for a nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.

A) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance
B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance
C) hypnosis does not increase left brain dominance
D) hypnosis affects brain dominance
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24
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.</strong> A) hypnosis affects brain dominance B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance C) hypnosis increases right brain dominance D) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance The nondirectional alternative hypothesis is _________.

A) hypnosis affects brain dominance
B) hypnosis does not affect brain dominance
C) hypnosis increases right brain dominance
D) hypnosis does not increase right brain dominance
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25
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The obtained probability = _________.</strong> A) 0.0161 B) 0.0384 C) 0.0192 D) 0.0322 The obtained probability = _________.

A) 0.0161
B) 0.0384
C) 0.0192
D) 0.0322
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26
If p (obtained) from an experiment equals 0.05 and alpha equals 0.05 (both two-tailed), what would you conclude?

A) reject H0
B) retain H0
C) reject H1
D) retain H1
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27
If the alpha level is changed from 0.05 to 0.01, what effect does this have on beta?

A) beta decreases
B) beta increases
C) beta is unaffected
D) cannot be determined
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28
lf we drew a random sample from an introductory psychology class, to whom could we generalize our results?

A) all of human kind
B) the university
C) all psychology students
D) the students in that introductory psychology class
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29
If you reject the null hypothesis, what type of error might you be making?

A) Type I
B) Type II
C) Type III
D) cannot be determined
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30
When the results are statistically significant, this means _________.

A) the obtained probability is equal to or less than alpha
B) the independent variable has had a large effect
C) we can reject H 0
D) the obtained probability is equal to or less than alpha and we can reject H 0
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31
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   If you conclude to reject H <sub>0</sub>, the error(s) you may be making is(are) _________.</strong> A) a Type I error B) a Type II error C) that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance D) a Type I error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance E) a Type II error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance If you conclude to reject H 0, the error(s) you may be making is(are) _________.

A) a Type I error
B) a Type II error
C) that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
D) a Type I error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
E) a Type II error and that hypnosis may not affect brain dominance
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32
A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained. <strong>A psychologist is interested in whether hypnosis affects brain dominance. Twelve college students from the freshmen class are randomly sampled for an experiment. The experiment has two conditions which are given on different days. In condition 1, the students are hypnotized and then given a test which measures the relative dominance of the right and left hemispheres. The higher the score, the more dominant is the right hemisphere. In condition 2, the same students are given the test again, only this time they are not hypnotized but are in their normal state of consciousness. The following scores are obtained.   The population to which these results apply is _________.</strong> A) all students B) the 12 students in the experiment C) the freshman class D) all adults The population to which these results apply is _________.

A) all students
B) the 12 students in the experiment
C) the freshman class
D) all adults
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33
The alpha level _________.

A) is always set at 0.05 or 0.01
B) is set after the data are analyzed
C) is determined by the consequences of making a Type I and Type II error
D) depends on N
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34
If you reject H0 when H0 is false, you have made a _________.

A) Type I error
B) Type II error
C) correct decision
D) none of these
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35
Using the sign test, if (1) H 1 is directional, (2) H 0 is false, (3) a = 0.01, and (4) N = 12, then the probability of making a Type I error equals _________.

A) 0.0002
B) 0.0010
C) 0
D) 0.0192
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36
The sign test can be used for _________.

A) a repeated measures design
B) a replicated measures design
C) a correlated measures design
D) all of these
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37
If the result of an experiment is statistically significant, this means _________.

A) the result is reliable
B) the result is important
C) if we repeat the experiment, we expect the result to be significant again
D) the result is reliable and if we repeat the experiment, we expect the result to be significant again
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38
If we set alpha at 0.05 instead of 0.01, other factors held constant _________.

A) greater risk of a Type I error and a lower risk of a Type II error
B) greater risk of a Type I error and a greater risk of a Type II error
C) a lower risk of a Type I error and a greater risk of a Type II error
D) a lower risk of a Type I error and a lower risk of a Type II error
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39
Using the sign test, with N = 15 and a = 0.05 2-tail , if H 0 is true, the probability of making a type I error equals _________.

A) 0.0042
B) 0
C) 0.05
D) 0.0352
E) none of these
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40
If alpha equals 0.05, how many times out of 100 would you expect to reject the null hypothesis when the null hypothesis is in fact true?

A) 1
B) 0.05
C) 0.01
D) 5
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41
If the results of an experiment allow rejection of the null hypothesis, _________.

A) the effect of the independent variable must be large.
B) similar results are likely to occur if the experiment is repeated
C) the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
D) the effect of the independent variable must be large and the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
E) similar results are likely to occur if the experiment is repeated and the experiment proves that H 0 is false.
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42
Using the sign test, and excluding ties, if H 0 is true the sample data must have half pluses and half minuses.
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43
The sign test analyzes both the magnitude and direction of the data.
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44
If H 0 is true and we reject it, we have made a Type I error.
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45
The alternative hypothesis must be nondirectional.
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46
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What type error might you be making using a = 0.05 2 tail ?</strong> A) Type I B) Type II C) Type III D) cannot be determined What type error might you be making using a = 0.05 2 tail ?

A) Type I
B) Type II
C) Type III
D) cannot be determined
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47
Regardless of whether H 1 is directional or nondirectional, when evaluating H 0 we always assume chance is responsible for the differences in results between conditions.
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48
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What would you conclude using a = 0.01 2 tail ?</strong> A) reject H<sub>0</sub> B) accept H<sub>0</sub> C) retain H<sub>0</sub> D) fail to reject H<sub>1</sub> E) accept or retain H<sub>0</sub> What would you conclude using a = 0.01 2 tail ?

A) reject H0
B) accept H0
C) retain H0
D) fail to reject H1
E) accept or retain H0
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49
We always evaluate the tail of the distribution, beginning with the obtained result, rather than just the obtained result itself.
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50
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   In a two-tailed test of H<sub>0</sub> using a = 0.05, what is p (obtained) for the results shown?</strong> A) 0.0500 B) 0.0108 C) 0.1094 D) 0.0216 In a two-tailed test of H0 using a = 0.05, what is p (obtained) for the results shown?

A) 0.0500
B) 0.0108
C) 0.1094
D) 0.0216
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51
If H 0 is false, and we retain it, we have made a Type II error.
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52
We always evaluate just the specific result obtained in the experiment.
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53
We always directly evaluate H 1 when analyzing the data.
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54
The value used for alpha depends on the consequences of making a Type I and Type II error.
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55
One can say it is always preferable to make a Type II error.

A) True
B) False
C) It depends on the costs of making a Type I or Type II error
D) None of these
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56
To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design: <strong>To answer this question, refer to the following hypothetical data collected using replicated measures design:   What is your conclusion regarding H<sub>0</sub> using a = 0.05<sub>2 tailed</sub>.</strong> A) reject H<sub>0</sub> B) accept H<sub>0</sub> C) retain H<sub>0</sub> D) retain H<sub>1</sub> E) accept or retain H<sub>0</sub> What is your conclusion regarding H0 using a = 0.052 tailed.

A) reject H0
B) accept H0
C) retain H0
D) retain H1
E) accept or retain H0
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57
In a nondirectional alternative hypothesis, evaluating the probability of observing 7 pluses out of 8 events equals _________.

A) p (7)
B) p (7) + p (8)
C) p (0) + p (1) + p (7) + p (8)
D) p (0) + p (8)
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58
For any given obtained result, a one tail p-level is

A) appropriate to use no matter what the alternative hypothesis states.
B) less than the two tail p-level
C) is appropriate to use only if the alternative hypothesis is directional
D) is appropriate to use only if the null hypothesis is nondirectional
E) less than the two tail p-level and is appropriate to use only if the alternative hypothesis is directional.
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59
It is always appropriate to use a directional alternative hypothesis.
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60
If H 0 is false and we reject it, we have made a Type II error.
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61
If H 0 is validly rejected, H 1 must be true.
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62
If H 0 is true, beta equals 0.00.
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63
It is impossible to get 20 pluses out of 20 pairs of scores in a replicated measures design due to chance alone.
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64
It is permissible to use a directional H 1 when there are good theoretical as well as strong supporting data to justify the predicted direction.
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65
H0 always asserts that the dependent variable has no effect on the independent variable.
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66
It is always appropriate to use a directional H 1 .
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67
Unless the very same subject is used in the control and experimental condition the design cannot be a replicated measures design.
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68
It is technically correct to conclude by "accepting" rather than "failing to reject" H 0 .
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69
The sign test analyzes raw scores.
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70
A replicated measures design is the same thing as a correlated groups design.
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71
H 1 and H 0, taken together, cover the entire continuum with regard to possible effects of the independent variable.
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72
The statement "Drug X has no effect on Y and any observed effect is due to chance alone" is an example of a nondirectional alternative hypothesis.
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73
If alpha is made more stringent, beta increases.
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74
The sign test is used with the replicated measures design.
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75
It is impossible to prove with certainty the truth of H 1 when using sample data.
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76
If the result turns out to be in the direction opposite to a directional H 1 , we must conclude by retaining H 0 .
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77
H0 and H1 must be mutually exclusive and exhaustive.
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78
The sign test ignores the magnitude of the difference scores.
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79
It is not possible to analyze the probability of the alternative hypothesis because the laws of probability are derived for chance events. This is why we test H0 instead of H1 .
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80
If results are statistically significant, the independent variable must have had a large effect.
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