A common request for jobbing analysts is to ‘run these results through the computer and see if they’re significant’. Now, unfortunately, many folk, including scarily, even lecturers in our craft, have a misconception as to what ‘significance’ actually means.
Shout in a desperate monotone “it’s the probability of getting a result as large as, or larger than, what we would obtain if the ‘null hypothesis’ of no difference or association was actually true” and people look flummoxed, yes flummoxed, as if you were speaking to them in the language of the ancient Huns, (another) language no-one has been able to figure out.
True, testing ‘something’ against the concept of ‘nothing’ is a bit kooky. If we really did have a situation where two groups ended up with identical averages we’d think it was a trifle dodgy to say the least.
And as for the notion of effect sizes! Picture, on an enchanted desert isle, two group means of 131.5 and 130, with a pooled standard deviation (sd) of 15. A difference of 1.5 divided by 15, is a Cohen’s (the late great Jacob Cohen; Cohen’s kappa, populariser of power analysis, maven of multiple regression) effect size of 0.10, where given Jack’s arbitrary but conventional guidelines for mean differences, 0.20 is a small effect size, 0.50 medium, 0.80 large.
Using an online calculator e.g.
http://www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/ttest1/
we find, that if there were 1000 in each group, the t test value would be 2.24 and our p value 0.026.
Voila, Eureka, Significance, as cook smiles and puts an extra dollop of custard on our pudding!
But if we ‘only’ had 100 in each group, our t value would be 0.71, our p value would be 0.48, and there’d be a sigh, a frown, a closing of doors and a grim faced cook doling out the thrice-boiled cabbage….
But they’re the same means, the same sd, and the same effect size!
Coming Up: Guest Post on a possible, probable, Salvation.
Further/Future reading
G Cumming (2014) How significant is P? Australasian Science, March 2014. p. 37.
http://www.australasianscience.com.au/article/issue-march-2014/how-significant-p.html
also check out Prof G’s website
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/psy/research/cognitive-and-developmental-psychology/esci
with free Excel ESCI program and details of his illuminating 2012 book ‘The New Statistics’.
Now, back to honest resting from honest labour!