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Hey all,
I'm very sorry, I googled a bit further and I found a document by somebody called Karl Wuensch which looks very promising (e.g. includes examples) at http://core.ecu.edu/psyc/wuenschk/docs30/Power-N.doc. Another of his documents (http://core.ecu.edu/psyc/wuenschk/docs30/EffectSizeConventions.doc) stated that: Size W OR Small .1 1.49 Medium .3 3.45 Large .5 9 Which answers my question; and I think his first document ('Power-N.doc') will be able to help me gain the necessary understanding to actually use these measures without screwing up :-) I am sorry for having sent the e-mail prematurely! I hope it did not cause too much inconvenience! Kind regards, Gjalt-Jorn ________________________________________________________________________ ____ Gjalt-Jorn Ygram Peters ## Phd. Student ## Visit: Department of Work and Social Psychology Room 3.004 Faculty of Psychology Universiteitssingel 5 University of Maastricht 6229 ES Maastricht The Netherlands ________________________________________________________________________ ____ -----Original Message----- From: Peters Gj (PSYCHOLOGY) Sent: dinsdag 4 december 2007 18:57 To: SPSS mailing list <[hidden email]> Subject: Chi-square and effect size W Dear SPSSX list, [this e-mail is about statistics rather than SPSS; if it is considered off-topic, please inform me and I'll find a group that's more appropriate. I post it here because it's about something that SPSS doesn't seem to do, and most people here seem to find statistics interesting, not only SPSS] I am writing a paper in which I report (among other things) bivariate psychological findings. Contrary to conventions in this field, I am planning to not report the 'default statistics' (e.g. t, F, Chi^2) but effect sizes (I am aware of the fact that many of these have problems of their own, but am statistically too illiterate to do any better at the moment). I have searched Google and the limited literature I have at my disposal (actually mainly Cohen's 1992 Power Primer) and if I understand correctly, something called 'w' can be used to express the effect size corresponding to a chi-square. I can't find this thing in SPSS, so I resorted to calculate it myself. If I understood correctly, it is calculated similar to chi-square: for each cell, take the _proportion_ (as opposed to frequency) in that cell, subtract the proportion one expected given H0, and divide by expected proportion given H0; then take the square root of the sum for all cells: w = SQRT ( (Pfound - Pexpected) / Pexpected) ) I played around a bit with Excel (ahum) and it seems that if you divide Chi-square by the total number of observations in the original table, then take the square root, you get w, too. So far so good, I thought (I hope you're still with me :-)). However, for 2x2 tables, I want to use odds ratios (OR) as effect size measure; but I need to know values corresponding to 'small', 'medium' and 'large' (I know this 'labelling' is not ideal). I know these for w (.2, .3 & .5, according to Cohen). So I adjusted my Excel sheet to, for any given 2x2 table, calculate both w and the OR, and started to create tables that gave w's of .2, .3 and .5, so that I could use the corresponding OR in the paper. Yet, it appears that different tables, with the same corresponding w, have different corresponding ORs . . . Now, my question is, could anybody please tell me where I screw up? I would be very grateful for any help/pointers anybody can give me! [I will send anybody who's interested the Excel file of course; I also have Excel files to calculate Cohen's d and Omega-squared, all three use exported SPSS output files to automatically make a list of all t-tests/anova's/chi-squares and calculate the effect sizes, so if anybody wants it, just drop me a line!] Thank you in advance and kind regards, Gjalt-Jorn Peters ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
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Can you send me your spread sheet, I am curious about this problem.
Fermin Ornelas, Ph.D. Management Analyst III, AZ DES 1789 W. Jefferson Street Phoenix, AZ 85032 Tel: (602) 542-5639 E-mail: [hidden email] -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Peters Gj (PSYCHOLOGY) Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2007 11:11 AM To: [hidden email] Subject: CANCELLING: Chi-square and effect size W Hey all, I'm very sorry, I googled a bit further and I found a document by somebody called Karl Wuensch which looks very promising (e.g. includes examples) at http://core.ecu.edu/psyc/wuenschk/docs30/Power-N.doc. Another of his documents (http://core.ecu.edu/psyc/wuenschk/docs30/EffectSizeConventions.doc) stated that: Size W OR Small .1 1.49 Medium .3 3.45 Large .5 9 Which answers my question; and I think his first document ('Power-N.doc') will be able to help me gain the necessary understanding to actually use these measures without screwing up :-) I am sorry for having sent the e-mail prematurely! I hope it did not cause too much inconvenience! Kind regards, Gjalt-Jorn ________________________________________________________________________ ____ Gjalt-Jorn Ygram Peters ## Phd. Student ## Visit: Department of Work and Social Psychology Room 3.004 Faculty of Psychology Universiteitssingel 5 University of Maastricht 6229 ES Maastricht The Netherlands ________________________________________________________________________ ____ -----Original Message----- From: Peters Gj (PSYCHOLOGY) Sent: dinsdag 4 december 2007 18:57 To: SPSS mailing list <[hidden email]> Subject: Chi-square and effect size W Dear SPSSX list, [this e-mail is about statistics rather than SPSS; if it is considered off-topic, please inform me and I'll find a group that's more appropriate. I post it here because it's about something that SPSS doesn't seem to do, and most people here seem to find statistics interesting, not only SPSS] I am writing a paper in which I report (among other things) bivariate psychological findings. Contrary to conventions in this field, I am planning to not report the 'default statistics' (e.g. t, F, Chi^2) but effect sizes (I am aware of the fact that many of these have problems of their own, but am statistically too illiterate to do any better at the moment). I have searched Google and the limited literature I have at my disposal (actually mainly Cohen's 1992 Power Primer) and if I understand correctly, something called 'w' can be used to express the effect size corresponding to a chi-square. I can't find this thing in SPSS, so I resorted to calculate it myself. If I understood correctly, it is calculated similar to chi-square: for each cell, take the _proportion_ (as opposed to frequency) in that cell, subtract the proportion one expected given H0, and divide by expected proportion given H0; then take the square root of the sum for all cells: w = SQRT ( (Pfound - Pexpected) / Pexpected) ) I played around a bit with Excel (ahum) and it seems that if you divide Chi-square by the total number of observations in the original table, then take the square root, you get w, too. So far so good, I thought (I hope you're still with me :-)). However, for 2x2 tables, I want to use odds ratios (OR) as effect size measure; but I need to know values corresponding to 'small', 'medium' and 'large' (I know this 'labelling' is not ideal). I know these for w (.2, .3 & .5, according to Cohen). So I adjusted my Excel sheet to, for any given 2x2 table, calculate both w and the OR, and started to create tables that gave w's of .2, .3 and .5, so that I could use the corresponding OR in the paper. Yet, it appears that different tables, with the same corresponding w, have different corresponding ORs . . . Now, my question is, could anybody please tell me where I screw up? I would be very grateful for any help/pointers anybody can give me! [I will send anybody who's interested the Excel file of course; I also have Excel files to calculate Cohen's d and Omega-squared, all three use exported SPSS output files to automatically make a list of all t-tests/anova's/chi-squares and calculate the effect sizes, so if anybody wants it, just drop me a line!] Thank you in advance and kind regards, Gjalt-Jorn Peters ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD NOTICE: This e-mail (and any attachments) may contain PRIVILEGED OR CONFIDENTIAL information and is intended only for the use of the specific individual(s) to whom it is addressed. It may contain information that is privileged and confidential under state and federal law. This information may be used or disclosed only in accordance with law, and you may be subject to penalties under law for improper use or further disclosure of the information in this e-mail and its attachments. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the person named above by reply e-mail, and then delete the original e-mail. Thank you. ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
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