Department of Psychology, Lancaster University
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We are working together to develop concepts:
We are working together to develop skills:
Important
By end of first year, most students learn to code in R:
The derivation chain (Meehl, 1990; Scheel et al., 2021)
We often teach and learn about different kinds of validity but the key idea is simple (Borsboom et al., 2004):
a test is valid for measuring an attribute if and only if (a) the attribute exists and (b) variations in the attribute causally produce variations in the outcomes of the measurement procedure
We want to work with valid measures but validity requires explaining: (Q.1) Does the thing exist in the world? (Q.2) Is variation in that thing be reflected in variation in our measurement?
Note
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ETHNICITY White, is AGE 34 years, scored 33 on Shipley vocabulary, scored 7 on HLVA health literacymean.self)mean.acc)# A tibble: 4 × 6
mean.acc mean.self HLVA SHIPLEY AGE ETHNICITY
<dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <fct>
1 0.49 7.96 7 33 34 White
2 0.85 7.28 7 33 25 White
3 0.82 7.36 8 40 43 White
4 0.94 7.88 11 33 46 White
Covariance
\[COV_{xy} = \frac{\sum(x - \bar{x})(y - \bar{y})}{n -1}\]
Covariance divided by standard deviations
\[r = \frac{COV_{xy}}{s_xs_y}\]
SHIPLEY out of 40; mean.acc (proportion, out of 1)Note
Research question: Can people accurately evaluate whether they correctly understand written health information?
mean.acc and mean.self scores will be associatedmean.acc and mean.self scores will be correlatedHistograms showing the distribution of mean accuracy and mean self-rated accuracy scores in the ‘clearly.one.subjects’ dataset: means calculated for each participant over all their responses
mean.accuracy score of .49, lower than the averagemean.accuracy score of .94, higher than the averagemean.self scores be: will they be higher or lower than the average mean.self score?Scatterplots showing whether values on mean accuracy (mean.acc) vary together with values on mean self-rated accuracy (mean.self) for the participants in this sample
cor.test function, and name one variable clearly.one.subjects$mean.accclearly.one.subjects$mean.selfmethod = "pearson" because we have a choicecor) and the p-valuecor = .4863771 which we round to \(cor = .49\)p-value = 2.026e-11 indicating that the correlation is significant \(p < .001\)
Pearson's product-moment correlation
data: clearly.one.subjects$mean.acc and clearly.one.subjects$mean.self
t = 7.1936, df = 167, p-value = 2.026e-11
alternative hypothesis: true correlation is not equal to 0
95 percent confidence interval:
0.3619961 0.5937425
sample estimates:
cor
0.4863771
Mean accuracy and mean self-rated accuracy were significantly correlated (\(r (167) = .49, p < .001\)). Higher mean accuracy scores are associated with higher mean self-rated accuracy scores.
mean.acc) scores are associated with higher mean self-rated accuracy (mean.self) scoresWe can simulate data to demonstrate: (left) the correlation is positive, \(r = .5\); (right) the correlation is negative, \(r = -.5\)
Scatterplots showing how simulated data values on mean accuracy and mean self-rated accuracy could vary together given positive or negative correlations
Scatterplots showing how simulated data values on mean accuracy and mean self-rated accuracy could vary together given positive correlations of increasing size