Multiple Choice
- Which of the following is defined as the middle-most score:
- a. mean
- b. median
- c. mode
- d. standard deviation
- e. frequency distribution
- 2. Which of the following is defined as the-most common (popular) score:
- a. mean
- b. median
- c. mode
- d. standard deviation
- e. frequency distribution
- 3. When a curve is skewed, which of the following is the middle-most score:
- a. mean
- b. median
- c. mode
- d. standard deviation
- e. frequency distribution
- 4. Which of the following is most affected by outlying scores:
- a. mean
- b. median
- c. mode
- d. B and C
- e. A, B and C are equally affected
- 5. When a distribution is positively skewed, the mean is __________ the median:
- a. lower than
- b. equal to
- c. higher than
- d. twice as large as
- e. twice as small as
- For the next five items, consider the following numbers:
- 76
- 69
- 68
- 67
- 67
- 67
- 66
- 65
- 58
- 6. What is the median of these numbers:
- a. 18
- b. 33
- c. 58
- d. 67
- e. 76
- 7. What is the mode of these numbers:
- a. 18
- b. 33
- c. 58
- d. 67
- e. 76
- 8. What is the range of these numbers:
- a. 18
- b. 33
- c. 58
- d. 67
- e. 76
- 9. This distribution is best described as:
- a. normal
- b. positively skewed
- c. negatively skewed
- d. bimodal
- e. extensive
- 10. Without using a calculator, what is the mean of the above data (hint: see item #9):
- a. 47.5
- b. 64.3
- c. 67
- d. 68.4
- e. 68.7
The more variability in a distribution, the larger its:
a. mean
b. median
c. mode
d. standard deviation
e. all of the above
2. Sums of squares is a measure of:
a. dispersion
b. central tendency
c. covariance
d. interpolation
e. extrapolation
3. Which of the following is the average of the squared deviations:
a. mean
b. mean variance
c. sum of squares
d. standard deviation
e. variance
4. From one standard deviation above and below the mean accounts for what percent of the scores:
a. 17%
b. 25%
c. 34%
d. 68%
e. 95%
5. Which of the following is the square root of variance:
a. mean
b. median
c. mode
d. mean variance
e. standard deviation
6. To calculate the variance of a population, Sums of Squares is divided by:
a. N
b. N-1
c. N-2
d. N-3
e. mean
7. Which of the following is the best measure of the fluctuation of a company’s stock price:
a. mean
b. median
c. mode
d. mean variance
e. standard deviation
8. When looking for a homogeneous group of people, we should choose the one with:
a. the largest mean
b. the smallest mean
c. the largest standard deviation
d. the smallest standard deviation
e. the mode in the middle
9. A score of 50 on a test with a mean of 100 would be considered normal if the standard deviation was:
a. 1
b. 5
c. 10
d. 20
e. none of the above
10. A score of 50 on a test with a mean of 55 would be considered quite unusual if the standard deviation was:
a. 1
b. 5
c. 10
d. 20
e. none of the
Which of the following has multiple predictors and a single outcome measure (criterion)
a. multivariate analysis
b. independent t-test
c. multiple regression
d. regression
e. correlation
An ordinal scale meets which of the following assumptions:
- ordering in magnitude
- equal units
- A and B
- A and B plus other assumptions
- none of the above
- A ratio scale meets which of the following assumptions:
- ordering in magnitude
- equal units
- A and B
- A and B plus other assumptions
- none of the above
- A nominal scale meets which of the following assumptions:
- ordering in magnitude
- equal units
- A and B
- A and B plus other assumptions
- none of the above
- A test which only orders traits in magnitude is best described as:
- cardinal
- interval
- nominal
- ratio
- ordinal
- An item which asks people to rate something from 1 to 5 (5 being high) is on what level of measurement:
- cardinal
- interval
- nominal
- ratio
- ordinal
- The more samples taken, the more normal the curve looks, according to the:
- critical-limit hypothesis
- null-limit hypothesis
- maximum-limit theorem
- unbiased-limit theorem
- central-limit theorem
- A cumulative frequency divided by N (times 100) equals:
- proportion
- percent
- percentile
- preponderance
- posthumous
- Which of the following is an example of a grouped frequency distribution:
- data matrix
- correlation
- regression
- histogram
- t-test
- Which of the following is defined as a score divided by the total possible:
- frequency distribution
- percentile
- sample
- percent
- proportion
- The number of obstacles a horse jumps over would be a(n) ___________ measurement.
- cardinal
- interval
- nominal
- ratio
4
A z-score of +2 on a test with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 10 would equal a score of:
- 80
- 95
- 100
- 102
- 120
- Which of the following is calculated by subtracting the mean from the score and dividing by the standard deviation:
- intelligence quotient
- z-score
- t score
- stanine
- percentile
- What percentile is associated with a z-score (1-tailed) of 1.52:
- .063
- .437
- .737
- .747
- .939
- Using the tables at the back of the book, how much area is beyond a z-score of .61:
- .027
- .229
- .271
- .374
- .427
- What percentage of scores are between a z-score of -1.3 and a z of +1.65:
- 52%
- 64%
- 68%
- 72%
- 86%
- A z-score of -1 on a test with a mean of 90 and a standard deviation of 10 would equal a score of:
- 80
- 95
- 100
- 102
- 120
- What area under a normal curve is associated with a z-score (1-tailed) of .52:
- .0636
- .4375
- .6985
- .8475
- .9375
- Using the tables at the back of the book, how much area is beyond a z-score of -2.61:
- .0045
- .1745
- .4570
- .5045
- .9045
- What percentage of scores are between a z-score of -1.04 and a z of +.45:
- 52%
- 64%
- 68%
- 72%
- 86%
- A z-score of -1.5 on a test with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 10 would equal a score of:
- 85
- 95
- 100
- 105
5
Which of the following gives the correlation between two discrete variables:
- phi
- Pearson r
- least squares criterion
- point biserial
- confidence level
- Which of the following correlation coefficients shows the greatest amount of relationship:
- .23
- .45
- .56
- .71
- -.89
- A correlation between two variables:
- proves A causes B
- proves B causes A
- proves C causes A
- proves C causes B
- none of the above
- Which of the following best describes this correlation:
- strong, positive
- strong, negative
- weak, positive
- weak, negative
- no correlation
- The angle of a regression line is called:
- intercept
- intersect
- slope
- shift
- the point where X and Y meet
- Scores which are projected beyond their samples are said to be:
- interpolated
- extrapolated
- innovated
- interpreted
- insubstantiated
- Scores which predict between samples are said to be:
- interpolated
- extrapolated
- innovated
- interpreted
- insubstantiated
- Covariance divided by the product of the standard deviations of X and Y equals:
- correlation
- intercept
- slope
- criterion
- linkage
- The standard error of estimate is best understood as:
- Sums of Squares
- variance
- standard deviation
- mean
- median
- As a director of marketing, you are interested in how well your sales did over the year. In particular, you are curious whether last year’s revenue is a good predictor of this year’s. Since you are interested in how well one test acts as a linear predictor of another, which of the following tests should you perform:
- t-test
- ANOVA
- correlation
- regression
- multiple regression
6
Which of the following do we select, manipulate, impose or induce:
- independent variable
- dependent variable
- moderator variable
- suppressor variable
- intervening variable
- Which of the following do we measure, observe or record:
- independent variable
- dependent variable
- moderator variable
- suppressor variable
- intervening variable
- In an actual research study, annual income could be:
- a predictor
- a criterion
- type I error
- either A or B
c A, B or C
- A test which is given to widely varied groups will probably result in a distribution which is:
- linear
- normal
- skewed
- curvilinear
- criterion-referenced
- A factor whose levels are described as “high” and “low” is:
- valid
- reliable
- discrete
- logarithmic
- continuous
- The type of relationships between model components is determined by our:
- theoretical questions
- empirical analysis
- sampling error
- statistical bias
- control groups
- Which of the following is a graphic description of scores:
- sample
- percent
- percentile
- population analysis
- frequency distribution
- A selected part of a larger group is called a:
- sample
- percent
- percentile
- population analysis
- frequency distribution
- A test which describes a restricted range of people might well result in a distribution which is:
- bimodal
- positively skewed
- negatively skewed
- B and C
- A, B and C
- The following distribution is best described as:
- normal
- positively skewed
- negatively skewed
- bimodal
- strange
7
Covariance divided by the variance of X equals:
- correlation
- intercept
- slope
- criterion
- linkage
- A null hypothesis says that two means are:
- significantly different
- slight different
- not significantly different
- maybe different
- you have hit the null on the head
- A t-test compares:
- two medians
- two modes
- two means
- two variables
- two standard deviations
- A t-test is calculated like which of the following:
- point estimation
- sum of squares
- degrees of freedom
- z-scores
- confidence levels
- Rejecting the null when you should have accepted it is a:
- Type I error
- Type II error
- Type III error
- Typo error
- Not My Type error
- Compared to an alpha level of .20, an alpha level of .05 is less likelyto have:
- Type I error
- Type II error
- Type III error
- Type O error
- Not My Type error
- When the null hypothesis is true, the expected value for an independent measures t statistic is:
- 0
- +1.0
- -1.0
- +1 or -1
- none of the above
- When t = 2.01 and N = 5000, it indicates that the means are significantly different (2 tailed) at the:
- .20 alpha level
- .05 alpha level
- .01 alpha level
- both A and B
- A, B and C
- When t = 4.3 and N = 50, it indicates that the means are significantly different (2 tailed) at the:
- .20 alpha level
- .05 alpha level
- .01 alpha level
- both A and B
- A, B and C
- An alpha level of .20 results in what z-score (1 tailed):
- .69
- .86
- 1.33
- 1.65
- 1.96
8
If the probability of being hit by lightning is .3 (it’s a very stormy night), and the probability of eating chocolate ice cream is .5, what is the probability of eating ice cream AND being hit by lightning?
- .3
- .5
- .8
- .15
- .25
- In the simplest case, the probability of either A or B occurring is calculated by:
- adding the probabilities
- subtracting the probabilities
- multiplying the probabilities
- dividing the probabilities
- both A and C
- If the alpha level is set at .05, the probability of making a Type I error is:
- .01
- .02
- .05
- .10
- .20
- The probability of passing this test item is:
- o
- p
- q
- r
- extremely unlikely
- A nondirectional test of significance is said to be:
- no-tailed
- one-tailed
- two-tailed
- three-tailed
- four-tailed
- An independent measures experiment uses two samples with n = 8 in each group to compare two experimental treatments. The t statistic from this experiment will have degrees of freedom equal to:
- 7
- 8
- 14
- 15
- 16
- The advantage of a repeated measures design is that it reduces the contribution of error variability due to:
- mean of D
- degrees of freedom
- the effect of the treatment
- individual differences
- none of the above
- For a repeated measures experiment, df = 10. How many subjects were used in the entire study:
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 18
- 22
- Compared to a one-way test (at the same alpha level), a two-tailed test is less likely to have:
- Type I error
- Type II error
- Type III error
- Type O error
- None of the above
- How many dependent variables does a t-test have:
- 1
- 2
- 3
- N
9
consistent measurement is:
- reliable
- discrete
- continuous
- valid
- logarithmic
- An independent t-test assumes that:
- subjects are randomly assigned
- subjects are from different populations
- two independent variables are equal
- the null hypothesis is true
- none of the above
- A correlation assumes that:
- subjects are randomly assigned
- subjects are from different populations
- two independent variables are equal
- sample size is small
- none of the above
- An independent t-test has degrees of freedom equal to:
- N
- N minus 1
- N minus 2
- N minus k
- N minus standard deviation
- A correlated t-test has degrees of freedom equal to:
- N
- N minus 1
- N minus 2
- N minus k
- N minus standard deviation
- Which of the following uses pooled variance as an error term:
- regression
- one-way ANOVA
- t-test
- factorial ANOVA
- all of the above
- In a nondirectional hypothesis:
- the larger mean should be subtracted from the smaller
- the smaller mean should be subtracted from the larger
- the mean used to estimate the population mean should be subtracted from the sample mean
- the sample mean should be subtracted from the mean used to estimate the population mean
- It doesn’t matter which mean is subtracted from which
- In a null hypothesis assumes that the t-statistic is equal to:
- +2
- +1
- 0
- -1
- -2
- When more than two groups are to be compared, which of the following should be used:
- regression
- one-way ANOVA
- t-test
- naturalistic observation
- all of the above
- How many dependent variables are used in a t-test:
- 4
- 3
- 2
- 1
10
Which of the following has multiple predictors and a single outcome measure (criterion)
a. multivariate analysis
b. independent t-test
c. multiple regression
d. regression
e. correlation
2. Which of the following shows the interaction of 2 independent variables:
a. regression
b. one-way ANOVA
c. t-test
d. factorial ANOVA
e. all of the above
3. In a 2x3x4 factorial design, how many independent variables are there:
a. 1
b. 3
c. 6
d. 9
e. 24
4. How many dependent variables are in a 3×3 factorial ANOVA design:
a. 1
b. 2
c. 3
d. 6
e. 9
5. In a factorial ANOVA, degrees of freedom for SSbetween equals:
a. N
b. N minus 1
c. k
d. k minus 1
e. N minus k
6. In a factorial ANOVA, degrees of freedom for SSwithin equals:
a. N
b. N minus 1
c. k
d. k minus 1
e. N minus k
7. In a factorial ANOVA, degrees of freedom for SStotal equals:
a. N
b. N minus 1
c. k
d. k minus 1
e. N minus k
8. Which of the following has multiple predictors and multiple criteria:
a. multivariate analysis
b. independent t-test
c. multiple regression
d. regression
e. correlation
9. Which of the following should be used to compare three or more groups:
a. t
b. F
c. r
d. r-squared
e. z
10. Which of the following is an estimate of error (individual differences):
a. SStotal
b. SSbetween
c. SSwithin
d. correlation
e. regression