CRIM 320 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Null Hypothesis, Level Of Measurement

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What happens when normality cannot be assumed. How do we measure association for nominal variables. Null hypothesis two variables are independent. X^2 = (observed frequency expected frequency)^2/expected frequency. Reject the null if the observed counts are sufficiently different from the expected. If we reject the null, we are stating that the two variables are dependent. 6) compare observed with expected, to determine if we can reject the null hypothesis. Data taken from table 1 in camp and gaes article. Table 1: misconduct of level iii inmates randomly assigned to level i and level iii prisons. Marginals calculating expected counts (for every cell*) row total x column total/grand total. Marginals these are the numbers that we expect if the two variables are independent of each other. Table 1: misconduct of level iii inmates randomly assigned to level i and level iii. Column marginals: calculating observed expected counts. A) each cell, subtract expected count from observed count.

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