Title: Two Factor Completely Between Subjects Analysis of Variance
1Two FactorCompletely Between Subjects Analysis
of Variance
2Hypothetical alertness data from a 2 x 2
completely between subjects factorial experiment
3Mean alertness scores in the 2x2 completely
between subjects factorial experiment
4Sources of Information in a 2 x 2 Completely
Between Subjects Factorial Design
Main effect of A
A x B interaction
Main effect of B
- Sampling error estimated by pooled within-group
variance - Main effect of treatment A estimated using
variance of mean values of Factor A collapsed
(i.e., averaged) over factor B - Main effect of treatment B estimated using
variance of mean values of Factor B collapsed
over factor A - A x B interaction -- estimated by variance of
mean values of all cells minus Treatment A minus
Treatment B
5Hypotheses Tested in a 2 x 2 completely between
subjects ANOVA
6Exercise
- 7.1 A researcher tests the influence of
different dosages of a drug on the detection of
targets flashed briefly in the visual field.
Target location is also manipulated For some
participants targets flash on the periphery of
the visual field whereas, for other participants,
targets flash toward the center of the visual
field. Scores represent the number of targets
identified in 10 trials. 18 participants are
assigned randomly to conditions.
(a) Does the evidence indicate that performance
differs according to target location? (?
.05) (b) Does the evidence indicate that drug
dosage and target location interact? (? .05)
7Mean Alertness Scores as a Function of Target
Location and Drug Dosage
Collapsed
2.33
4.00
8Preliminary Calculations
9Summary Table and Hypothesis Tests
10SPSS Output
11Hildebrand-Saints, L. Weary, G. (1989).
Depression and social information gathering.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 15,
150-160.
- Depressed persons are thought to feel a lack of
control - They feel chronically deprived of information
and, therefore, have a heightened tendency to
seek information, including social information - e.g., what other people are like
12Method
- 345 undergraduates
- Screened using the Beck Depression Inventory
(BDI) - Final sample -- 24 depressed and 24 not depressed
participants - Cover story
- interview another participant (confederate) as
part of a film for another study - Task
- select 10 prepared questions from a set of 30 to
ask the interviewee - questions varied in how much revealing
information they would elicit - 8 were highly
diagnostic - participants were also informed that they would
be quizzed about the interview afterward (high
informational utility) or that they would be free
to leave (low informational utility)
- Independent variables
- informational utility
- high (quizzed)
- low (free to leave)
- depression
- depressed
- not depressed
- 2 x 2 completely between subjects factorial
design - Hypotheses
- nondepressed participants will ask diagnostic
questions only when information utility is high - depressed participants will ask diagnostic
questions whether information utility is high or
low
13Mean number of high diagnostic questions selected
by level of depression and utility condition
Only difference to exceed chance
Note Mood x utility interaction, p lt .05.
14Mean number of high diagnostic questions selected
by depression level and utility condition