Inferential statistics - F ratios and the F-test


Ed 510 Applications of Educational Research



 


Example - A test of social responsibility
 

A social scientist has constructed three groups of students.  Each group consists of 3 experimental subjects and 1 to 3 additional members who are really stooges of the experimenter.  A fire alarm is called.  The dependent variable is the time that elapses before someone in any of the 3 groups decides to call the university security office.  The independent variable is the stooge condition (varied number of stooges).

The scores for each group are as follows

Group 1                Group 2                    Group 3
1 stooge                2 stooges                    3 stooges

8                                9                            16
4                               10                            18
3                               14                            20

Calculate the sample mean for each group.  Determine whether they are different.  Then calculate the mean for the entire  set of scores.
 


What makes this different in focus from a t-test is the following:  Although two independent sample means can be compared to each other simultaneously, three sample means cannot.  Therefore the mean of means (for the entire set of scores) is the reference point for comparison.  Each sample mean, when compared to the mean of means, will be equal to, greater than, or less than the mean of means.  When any two sample means are different from the mean of means, the question then is whether they are different from each other.
 

How are these differences tested statistically?
 


Types of variance can be summarized as follows.
 


 
 

There are three different statistics that must be computed for each source of variation.  Each statistic is computed three times: for between groups;  for within groups and for the total, respectively.

These statistics are
 

The table below helps to visualize how these statistics fit together.  It is referred to as a source table.  Once all the values for SS, df and MS are calculated then they are inserted into the appropriate cells in the source table.
 
Source of variation Sum of Squares SS degrees of freedom df Mean Squares MS
Between groups      
Within groups      
Total      

 
 

When the Mean Squares (MS) are calculated, Sum of Squares is always divided by df.
 
 
A.  Between groups or SS between groups  (i.e., total variation between groups)/ df  between = MS between groups
B.  Within groups or SS within groups (i.e, total variation within groups)/df within =MS within groups.

 

and Total variation or SS total (i.e., total variation between and within groups/df total = MS total.

 

Each type of df is calculated separately:  e.g., Groups - 1 between; N-Groups-1 within; and N-1 total.

 


 

Practice  computing MS's for the following sets of numbers
 
 
SS between = 100 and df  = 2 
S  within = 500 and df = 50 
SS total = 500 and df = 52
then MS would be then MS would be
 
then MS would be

 
 

The F ratio is computed by dividing the MS betweenby the MS within


Try these two short exercises.  Fill in the blanks below.
 
 

There are four groups, each group represents a class that has learned a different study strategy to improve reading comprehension.  The independent variable is   _________________.  The dependent variable would probably be __________.  There are 100 subjects, 25 in each group.
 
 
 

What then are the steps in calculating an F-test?


then
 


then
 


then
 

Now complete the source table
 
 
Source of variation
Sum of squares
df
Mean squares
F -ratio
Between groups
1000.00
     
Within subjects
 500.00
     
Total
       

The calculated F-ratio is then compared to a tabled value, or critical value, of F to determine whether the groups are in deed statistically different and whether the alternative hypothesis should be supported.

In class we will practice reading computer printouts and using tabled values of F to further explore the F test.
 
 

Summarizing questions

Can you think of three different experiments you might design that would employ the F-test.
 
 

Page created January 5, 2001.  Page modified January 20, 2001.  Copyright Antonia D'Onofrio 2001/2002/2003.