standard deviation is a measure of dispersion- it tells you by how much individual values are different from the mean. another word for stan dev. is volatility. Z score is simply a way to standardize individual values in a sample. think of a z score as a scaled, or standardized version of a value. the formula to arrive at a z score is: (Value- Mean)/Stan deviation
There is a statistically significant difference between both your attentiveness and need of these info at the time you were at Uni and the time you watched this (p < .05)
Thank you Dr. Daniel. I'm a professor and STILL need refreshers on SPSS! You are THE only person I can learn about SPSS with and I so appreciate your sharing your knowledge in such an accessible way. The ego-less approach is wonderful! - Dr. Christen Cooper, Pace University
Wow, thank you! That is a high compliment from a professor. It is always great to get positive feedback but it means even more when it is from someone who is also in education. Please tell your students about the channel. Best to you.
I shall indeed tell my students. I'm a scientist (I am an Ed.D in Nutrition Education and I really. stumble with statistics). I "get" the whole picture of stats, but analyzing my own data gives me a sense of terror. I think it's conditioning as a young girl who was always at the top of my class who fell behind (when I was a teenager, with boys screaming out answers in class) in math. I know math is NOT statistics, but still, it's numeracy knowledge, which I feel I lack!
Thanks and welcome...it is gratifying to hear that. Stats can be intimidating. I try to take some time, slow down, explain it clearly, so that everyone can learn. Wish you the best.
This video is very much descriptive and interesting to know that many methods and values consist of our daily living and being able to see the means and the standard table of it in a different language is awesome. Which, I want to thank the professor for showing me the pathway to do so.
This is very useful in so many ways. I'm a PhD student. and very much interested to learn more about SPSS for my assignments and researches in the future. Thank you so much Dr. Daniel God Bless You.
I have enjoyed every single step of your video, spending less time in learning and getting much of knowledge. I appreciate your great help. Many thanks!!!!!!!!!!
I have enjoyed learned more in single of your video, spending less time in learning and getting much better of knowledge. I really appreciate your great help. Thanks So much
Thank you very much Dr. Todd Daniel. Am really learning alot from the series of your videos "SPSS for beginners" Lessons to lesson follow up is helping me gain alot in data analysis using S 🌍🌍
I missed my stats class for a family emergency when they did the spss lab and was feeling completely lost...so glad I found these to quickly catch up! Thank you!
Sir i am very thankful for your this positive efforts. i belong from pakistan here we dont have institute which build up skills in us. i learnt a lot about SPSS now i am proudly to say i know SPSS which i learnt by you
Thanks for that comment! Hey, I just posted the first of a brand new series about SPSS 27. Hope that you can check it out: th-cam.com/video/gyzTW08IceU/w-d-xo.html
NO WAY! I've just realised you are THE Todd Daniel from the history of psychology podcast!! I listened to those chapters like 6-7 years ago at the time I was learning English and getting interested in studying psychology! I am now in the middle of my master's dissertation at the university of Leuven in Belgium, and I randomly came across these videos! I kept having the feeling that I'd heard that voice before while watching, what I consider to be the best tutorial about stats and spss on the internet! I'm glad you're still producing excellent content that inspire a lot of people! Keep up the good work!
Yes, indeed...'tis I. I still love those podcasts and, you're right, they are very popular with people who are learning English. I guess it is that "Midwest accent." You remind me that I need to do some videos on YT promoting the podcast and maybe make a short podcast promoting the stats videos. So glad that you are still listening/watching. Best of luck with the dissertation.
haha yeah, I will also spread the word about these amazing productions. I was wondering if you guys are also planning on doing the same kind of tutorials clearly explaining how to use the software and the tests, but with R, given that you're called the Rstatsinstitute? have a good day!
Tutorials with R is certainly a possibility. We have discussed doing it. I suspect it will happen in the future, but I have many more SPSS videos in production and I want to do a series on JASP. I may do a few R videos on my favorite packages for intro to stats.
Thank you so much for generously sharing your knowledge and skill, Dr. Daniel. I have a question that will be even more grateful if it can be answered. May I know how to decide which critical value to adopt when referring to the Student-t table? How do I know whether the test is one-tailed or two-tailed and the alpha is equal to 0.05 or 0.01?
I’m confused, you used the 2.262 critical value from the two-tailed column instead of the one-tailed one. You are explaining for the one sample t-test (one tailed t-test) I figured that anyway, in the end the result is not significant due to the confidence interval not being 0 nor having our t value exceed the one tailed critical value of 1.8. The significance value also surpasses the alpha level. Could you(or anyone) point this out to confirm my confusion and offer some clarity? Thanks! The videos you provide are good! I appreciate it!
The test is a one SAMPLE test (comparing a single sample to a known population value), but we are using a two-TAIL variety of the test because we want to know if the sample mean is "different" than the known value. We would use a one-TAIL, one SAMPLE t test if we compare a single sample and ask if the sample mean is "higher" than the population value. So the one sample refers to our research design and the one/two tail refers to our research question. Hope that helps.
Hi, Many thanks for your videos, I was wondering if you could let me know that how I can make total score when 4 variable are the same, I mean 4 them likert 1 to 5 but the fifth variable is multiple answers 1 to 11, then how can I compute those variables? Please
You are going to need to combine items to create scales. You CAN do correlation with every item, but I do not recommend it. Instead, combine (average) multiple items into related constructs, then correlate two constructs. Hope that helps
Hi Professor, I would like to inquire, when referring to the t distribution's table with df=9, why comparing the critical value from 2 tail test instead of 1 tail test?
You would use the 2-tail test when your hypothesis is that the groups differ, but you do not state whether the mean will be higher or lower. Also, there is no specific option to interpret a 1-tail test in SPSS. You have to use the 2-tail output and then interpret what the cutoff score would be for a one-tail test. Hope that helps.
I'm not clear on which value you are asking about, so let me link you to another video on this test. It will contain much more detail and perhaps answer your question: th-cam.com/video/UaGMEPaSaFo/w-d-xo.html
That comparison value should be chosen as either the mean of the population from which the sample was chosen, or sometimes the mean of a test (such as comparing to an average IQ of 100). It should be a meaningful, comparable value. If you don't have one of those, then your test will not be meaningful.
Hello Sir, I really need your help 1. I have four groups in my experiment (one control and three experimental), I feed to control group the normal diet and to experimental groups normal diet plus different percentage of same supplement. Now I don't know how to calculate p-value of different groups (if adding supplement significantly affect the three experimental groups compare to control group or not). I have mean of live body weight of them from 12 days along the experiment (from begging till the end of the trial). 2. I have different mortality rates (%) in control and experimental groups, how to find if the mortality rate in experimental groups is significant or not compare to control group? thanks in advance Mohammad from Kabul Afghanistan
You should use a one-way ANOVA with four levels. Assuming that your samples/groups are each the same size, use a Tukey post hoc test if the F test is significant. It will help you see which groups differ. You can use weight as the DV. For % mortality, you can use a proportions test with a Bonferoni correction (set p = .0125 for 4 groups as your criteria for significance between groups). Hope that helps
One more thing...if all you want to do is compare each group to control, you ca use planned contrasts to control the p value error rate, instead. For the DV, I'd suggest using the beginning and ending weights, but that would change your design to a mixed ANOVA (instead of one-way). Wonderful to talk to someone from Kabul...wish you the very best for you and your country.
He'll .. please help me I'm still unable to download spss in my pc so help as well suggest me to install nd which version i have to download please help me as soon as possible...
I wish that I had something more helpful for you. I recommend the current version (which may be the only version currently available), Version 26. For help with actual installation, I would refer you to support from the website where you downloaded it. Hope that you get it worked out!
Dear Sir, I usually confuse about the term: Statistically significant. What does it means? The treatments are significantly different from each other. These kind of sentences I have read in research papers. Why we need significantly different data?
Two videos: (1) what statistical significance means, (2) what statistical significance REALLY means . The first is basic, the second explains why it matters.
The Export button in the Viewer/output window allows you to export the results. Here is a video about how to do it: th-cam.com/video/-N7BsdkhDL4/w-d-xo.html
When should i use frequency? When should i use anova? When should i use descriptive ? When should i use correlation? When should i use independent test? I am sorry . I am very lost 😭😭😭😭😭😭. My professor is trash plz reply
Hey, you sound a little overwhelmed with stats. Let's keep it simple. First, stats is all about numbers. Sometimes we count things, or measure them, or just use numbers to label groups (Group1, Group 2, etc.). So when you count things, you use frequency. How many of each do you have? ANOVA and t tests are for when you measure something and you want to see if the measurement is different between 2 groups (indep. t test) or 3+ groups (ANOVA). You can also do repeated measures where you measure the same group twice (paired or RM t test) or 3+ times (RM ANOVA). Correlation is when you measure two things (temperature & sales) then you look for a relationship between them (do sales go up when it gets colder?). I have playlists for all of these, so please check those out and see if that helps walk you through your course. Wish you the best. You're going to get through this!
There are no free versions of SPSS available but there are student versions available at a reduced price. I recommend OnTheHub, but there may be other websites. Once you download the software, you simply follow the installation instructions. You must have an academic email to get the student version, however (i.e. ending in .EDU). Good luck
I think it is very difficult to understand that p-value in this lesson, why it is so large, especially when the sample mean close to the population mean?
Learnt more from you about spss within 1 hour than watching my previously recorded hours of lectures from Uni.. Thank you very much :)
What a great comment! Thank you so much. Keep watching.
sir what is the difference between standard deviation and z score ? and could u give an example, please?
standard deviation is a measure of dispersion- it tells you by how much individual values are different from the mean. another word for stan dev. is volatility.
Z score is simply a way to standardize individual values in a sample. think of a z score as a scaled, or standardized version of a value. the formula to arrive at a z score is:
(Value- Mean)/Stan deviation
@@ResearchByDesign zv😢 has always🎉z😊🎉W🎉🎉 p tryy TY 😢😢🎉😊🎉 🎉
There is a statistically significant difference between both your attentiveness and need of these info at the time you were at Uni and the time you watched this (p < .05)
Thank you Dr. Daniel. I'm a professor and STILL need refreshers on SPSS! You are THE only person I can learn about SPSS with and I so appreciate your sharing your knowledge in such an accessible way. The ego-less approach is wonderful! - Dr. Christen Cooper, Pace University
Wow, thank you! That is a high compliment from a professor. It is always great to get positive feedback but it means even more when it is from someone who is also in education. Please tell your students about the channel. Best to you.
I shall indeed tell my students. I'm a scientist (I am an Ed.D in Nutrition Education and I really. stumble with statistics). I "get" the whole picture of stats, but analyzing my own data gives me a sense of terror. I think it's conditioning as a young girl who was always at the top of my class who fell behind (when I was a teenager, with boys screaming out answers in class) in math. I know math is NOT statistics, but still, it's numeracy knowledge, which I feel I lack!
Dr, I thank you and appreciate you a lot.
The COVID pandemic has separated me from on campus learning. These videos have been a life saver! Thank you
Great to hear! I am grateful that students are finding the videos and using them when they can't be in the classroom. Stay healthy!
Dr. Daniel is brilliant! He makes the concepts easy to follow...and I almost feel like I get it when I am done watching!
Outstanding...thank you for such a wonderful comment!
I really enjoyed watching your SPSS video... Simple language ...very clear... U stressed on important points... So beautifully explained... Excellent
I have never seen someone explaining something so damn great like you! This is what I call a TEACHER! Thank you!
Thank you so much...what a wonderful comment. Hope that you find other videos on the channels that are equally helpful.
Efficient time (management), precise explanation, not boring presentation. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Very clear and simple explanation. Thank you Dr. Daniel.
You are welcome!
Great teacher by all standards. Good work.
Hello from Turkey, I really like the pace and the very clear explanations. I feel safer when I watch you. Thanks a lot.
Thanks and welcome...it is gratifying to hear that. Stats can be intimidating. I try to take some time, slow down, explain it clearly, so that everyone can learn. Wish you the best.
You legit are saving my statistics grade, THANK YOU SO MUCH
I am learning more than from my Master's programs. Thank you.
Great comment. Thank you so much. Wish you the best with your masters program.
This video is very much descriptive and interesting to know that many methods and values consist of our daily living and being able to see the means and the standard table of it in a different language is awesome. Which, I want to thank the professor for showing me the pathway to do so.
Glad you enjoyed it! Check out the channel playlists for more in-depth videos on these topics. Cheers!
you are marking us great statician!
Thank you Dr. spss explained in the simplest form
This is very useful in so many ways. I'm a PhD student. and very much interested to learn more about SPSS for my assignments and researches in the future. Thank you so much Dr. Daniel God Bless You.
Glad it was helpful! Hope that you can find many others on the channel. Cheers!
I have enjoyed every single step of your video, spending less time in learning and getting much of knowledge. I appreciate your great help. Many thanks!!!!!!!!!!
Loving these videos! So clear and easy to follow. Thank you
I have enjoyed learned more in single of your video, spending less time in learning and getting much better of knowledge. I really appreciate your great help. Thanks So much
Thank you so much for the video. Helped me understand SPSS way better than I did in the class. Have a good feeling about the exams now. :)
Thank you very much Dr. Todd Daniel. Am really learning alot from the series of your videos "SPSS for beginners" Lessons to lesson follow up is helping me gain alot in data analysis using S
🌍🌍
May God bless you and guide you onto the straight path
Thank You Sir..Such an elegant way to explain.
Learned the most hardiest things in most simplest way from you, Thanks a lot Sir...... 🙏
All the best. My pleasure.
You have made me become a good statistician I never thought I could be
Such a wonderful comment. So glad that the videos have been helpful.
I missed my stats class for a family emergency when they did the spss lab and was feeling completely lost...so glad I found these to quickly catch up! Thank you!
Excellent...I am so glad that I can help your education. That was the whole reason for making this series. Wish you the best.
Sir i am very thankful for your this positive efforts. i belong from pakistan here we dont have institute which build up skills in us. i learnt a lot about SPSS now i am proudly to say i know SPSS which i learnt by you
So honored to know that I can help you learn SPSS from so far away. That is what professors live for...education beyond the classroom. Thanks!
I can study these all day!!
Thanks for that comment! Hey, I just posted the first of a brand new series about SPSS 27. Hope that you can check it out: th-cam.com/video/gyzTW08IceU/w-d-xo.html
Bestie i literally owe you my diploma, thank you for the videos, love u G!
You're so welcome! Glad to help play a part in your education. You got this...good luck!
This video give me life since i can hv an idea before lab this evening. Huhu learning during pandemic has been ease a bit with this. Thank you
Wonderful! Wish you the best with your studies
Thank you for uploading such a great lecture on t-test.
All that I learned now makes sense. Thanks!
Superb sir never heard such pleasant superb teaching
So nice of you. Thanks for the comment
thank you. This is excellent direct to the point teaching.
NO WAY! I've just realised you are THE Todd Daniel from the history of psychology podcast!! I listened to those chapters like 6-7 years ago at the time I was learning English and getting interested in studying psychology! I am now in the middle of my master's dissertation at the university of Leuven in Belgium, and I randomly came across these videos! I kept having the feeling that I'd heard that voice before while watching, what I consider to be the best tutorial about stats and spss on the internet! I'm glad you're still producing excellent content that inspire a lot of people! Keep up the good work!
Yes, indeed...'tis I. I still love those podcasts and, you're right, they are very popular with people who are learning English. I guess it is that "Midwest accent." You remind me that I need to do some videos on YT promoting the podcast and maybe make a short podcast promoting the stats videos. So glad that you are still listening/watching. Best of luck with the dissertation.
haha yeah, I will also spread the word about these amazing productions. I was wondering if you guys are also planning on doing the same kind of tutorials clearly explaining how to use the software and the tests, but with R, given that you're called the Rstatsinstitute? have a good day!
Tutorials with R is certainly a possibility. We have discussed doing it. I suspect it will happen in the future, but I have many more SPSS videos in production and I want to do a series on JASP. I may do a few R videos on my favorite packages for intro to stats.
That would be amazing, and I also predict very popular now that R is becoming so widespread even in social sciences.Thanks a lot!
I learned so much from this video. Thank you very much!
I'm so glad! Thank you for commenting.
You are an excellent teacher!
Thank you! 😃
This is better than college :)
Ah, but there are so many things that are better than college... :o)
Thanks for the comment. Glad that they are useful for you.
Thank you for introducing SPSS and the terms in a way that's easy to understand! Much appreciated.
Glad it was helpful!
In love with your videos.
Great videos, I would like to know how to use spss from an NES data set. Any ideas
I always look forward to the next Video. Excellent Teaching Sir!
Glad to hear that!
Best teacher!
So if the difference is not significant does that make the null 65? And would you say you are retaining the null hypothesis?
Great explanation, THANKS!!!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for this vide. I want to ask how do we find the table for "critical value for the t distribution"? I hope to get response. Thank you
thank you! helpful in reminding me of what I used to use in conducting statistical calculations
thank you very much , it was very helpful and easy to understand
seriously, thank you!
What test would I use for a 1 way t- test? I want to compare a portion of my population to the entire population
thank you so much for this video, it really helped
Best for beginners
Thank you so much for generously sharing your knowledge and skill, Dr. Daniel. I have a question that will be even more grateful if it can be answered.
May I know how to decide which critical value to adopt when referring to the Student-t table? How do I know whether the test is one-tailed or two-tailed and the alpha is equal to 0.05 or 0.01?
Very very very well explained thanks a lot
You are most welcome
Thank you. You are appreciated
Thank you Dr Daniel
You are ver welcome, thanks for watching
This is very helpful thank you sooo much 🧡🧡🧡
You're so welcome!
awesome teaching..thanks a TON:)
your videos are superb.
I’m confused, you used the 2.262 critical value from the two-tailed column instead of the one-tailed one. You are explaining for the one sample t-test (one tailed t-test)
I figured that anyway, in the end the result is not significant due to the confidence interval not being 0 nor having our t value exceed the one tailed critical value of 1.8.
The significance value also surpasses the alpha level. Could you(or anyone) point this out to confirm my confusion and offer some clarity? Thanks!
The videos you provide are good! I appreciate it!
The test is a one SAMPLE test (comparing a single sample to a known population value), but we are using a two-TAIL variety of the test because we want to know if the sample mean is "different" than the known value. We would use a one-TAIL, one SAMPLE t test if we compare a single sample and ask if the sample mean is "higher" than the population value. So the one sample refers to our research design and the one/two tail refers to our research question. Hope that helps.
Great explanation... Thank you
You are welcome!
Hi, Many thanks for your videos, I was wondering if you could let me know that how I can make total score when 4 variable are the same, I mean 4 them likert 1 to 5 but the fifth variable is multiple answers 1 to 11, then how can I compute those variables? Please
Great videos!!! Kudos!
Sir. could you please explain how to do Pearson correlation for 2 variables with seven items in the questionnaire for each of this variable
You are going to need to combine items to create scales. You CAN do correlation with every item, but I do not recommend it. Instead, combine (average) multiple items into related constructs, then correlate two constructs. Hope that helps
Thank you so much!
Very helpful! Thanks!
Where does the T Table for critical values come from? Did I miss a video? Is this something I can calculate in excel? Thanks.
Try this one for an introduction: th-cam.com/video/kXoeRVdZbs8/w-d-xo.html. and this one for the how to: th-cam.com/video/qKQ0HZab240/w-d-xo.html
@@ResearchByDesign Awesome. Thank you. You guys rock!
Thank you so much for a great video!
Where it is suppose to say sig (2 sided) mine says one sided p and two sided p. Does anyone know how to fix this?
Thank you so much you saved me
Thank you so much
Thank you for your videos
Glad you like them!
You Da Man!
It's showing one sided p and two sided p in the output, I want to show p value . What to do ?
Hi Professor, I would like to inquire, when referring to the t distribution's table with df=9, why comparing the critical value from 2 tail test instead of 1 tail test?
You would use the 2-tail test when your hypothesis is that the groups differ, but you do not state whether the mean will be higher or lower. Also, there is no specific option to interpret a 1-tail test in SPSS. You have to use the 2-tail output and then interpret what the cutoff score would be for a one-tail test. Hope that helps.
Thanks for this video
Most welcome
professor, could you explain more what is test value in it, and how we can set it or know it??i m a bit confused abt it
I'm not clear on which value you are asking about, so let me link you to another video on this test. It will contain much more detail and perhaps answer your question: th-cam.com/video/UaGMEPaSaFo/w-d-xo.html
I have learnt a lot from this video. Thank you Sir :)
Very Nice
What if you don’t have a value for literature? What value can you place in there when running report ?
That comparison value should be chosen as either the mean of the population from which the sample was chosen, or sometimes the mean of a test (such as comparing to an average IQ of 100). It should be a meaningful, comparable value. If you don't have one of those, then your test will not be meaningful.
Thank you sooooooooo much.........
Most welcome 😊
thanks a lot that was very helpful
Great...glad that you learned something !
Excellent
Thank you so much 😀
Thanks
How and where can we download the software?
Thanks for the video, saved me. But whats with the camera angels? Its like a forensic files episode 😂
Hello Sir,
I really need your help
1. I have four groups in my experiment (one control and three experimental), I feed to control group the normal diet and to experimental groups normal diet plus different percentage of same supplement. Now I don't know how to calculate p-value of different groups (if adding supplement significantly affect the three experimental groups compare to control group or not). I have mean of live body weight of them from 12 days along the experiment (from begging till the end of the trial). 2. I have different mortality rates (%) in control and experimental groups, how to find if the mortality rate in experimental groups is significant or not compare to control group?
thanks in advance
Mohammad
from Kabul Afghanistan
You should use a one-way ANOVA with four levels. Assuming that your samples/groups are each the same size, use a Tukey post hoc test if the F test is significant. It will help you see which groups differ. You can use weight as the DV. For % mortality, you can use a proportions test with a Bonferoni correction (set p = .0125 for 4 groups as your criteria for significance between groups). Hope that helps
One more thing...if all you want to do is compare each group to control, you ca use planned contrasts to control the p value error rate, instead. For the DV, I'd suggest using the beginning and ending weights, but that would change your design to a mixed ANOVA (instead of one-way). Wonderful to talk to someone from Kabul...wish you the very best for you and your country.
@@ResearchByDesign
Thank you so much dear professor
He'll .. please help me I'm still unable to download spss in my pc so help as well suggest me to install nd which version i have to download please help me as soon as possible...
I wish that I had something more helpful for you. I recommend the current version (which may be the only version currently available), Version 26. For help with actual installation, I would refer you to support from the website where you downloaded it. Hope that you get it worked out!
Dear Sir, I usually confuse about the term: Statistically significant. What does it means? The treatments are significantly different from each other. These kind of sentences I have read in research papers. Why we need significantly different data?
Two videos: (1) what statistical significance means, (2) what statistical significance REALLY means . The first is basic, the second explains why it matters.
Thank You Sir
thank you sir
Most welcome
how do you copy your chart or scatterplot from spss to your document
The Export button in the Viewer/output window allows you to export the results. Here is a video about how to do it: th-cam.com/video/-N7BsdkhDL4/w-d-xo.html
When should i use frequency? When should i use anova? When should i use descriptive ? When should i use correlation? When should i use independent test? I am sorry . I am very lost 😭😭😭😭😭😭. My professor is trash plz reply
Hey, you sound a little overwhelmed with stats. Let's keep it simple. First, stats is all about numbers. Sometimes we count things, or measure them, or just use numbers to label groups (Group1, Group 2, etc.). So when you count things, you use frequency. How many of each do you have? ANOVA and t tests are for when you measure something and you want to see if the measurement is different between 2 groups (indep. t test) or 3+ groups (ANOVA). You can also do repeated measures where you measure the same group twice (paired or RM t test) or 3+ times (RM ANOVA). Correlation is when you measure two things (temperature & sales) then you look for a relationship between them (do sales go up when it gets colder?). I have playlists for all of these, so please check those out and see if that helps walk you through your course. Wish you the best. You're going to get through this!
how can I get and install free and offline spss software on my pc please help me
There are no free versions of SPSS available but there are student versions available at a reduced price. I recommend OnTheHub, but there may be other websites. Once you download the software, you simply follow the installation instructions. You must have an academic email to get the student version, however (i.e. ending in .EDU). Good luck
So your test value is like the bar you’d set to test your hypothesis. i was having such a hard time understanding until i watched this
Excellent! Glad to hear that it was helpful. That is a good way to conceptualize the explanation.
why do we calculate t_value
I think it is very difficult to understand that p-value in this lesson, why it is so large, especially when the sample mean close to the population mean?
Probability (p-value) is a function of effect size and sample size. As either of those get larger, the probability will grow smaller
awesome
Done
love you
Appreciate hearing it and thank you for watching the videos. Glad that they are helpful.
Appreciate hearing it and thank you for watching the videos. Glad that they are helpful.
Sir plz hlp me I need your hlp