Children who experience chronic pain as a result of medical


SPSS Cumulative Assessment Instructions

For each problem involving a test of significance, your answer mustinclude: A)SPSS output;B) an appropriate graph from SPSS;C)a Results section in current APA style including a statistical statement (i.e., t(19) = 1.79, p = .049);a sentence summarizing the results "in English" (i.e., "There was a significant difference between the two groups on the variable..." or "There was no significant difference..."); and a decision about the null hypothesis.

For ANOVA problems: Report statistical findings and make statements for all main effects and interaction effects. Use Tukey's test for any analyses requiring post hoc tests. Do not create a boxplot--use the graph we typically use in the course for this type of test.

1. Children who experience chronic pain as a result of medical procedures are the focus of a psychiatrist's study. Specifically, the psychiatrist wants to measure whether a new program helps decrease feelings of chronic pain in the short-term. He measures children's self-reports of pain levels before treatment on a standardized scale with a range of 0-10, with 10 being the most severe. He then administers the new program, and measures children's pain levels after treatment. Does the new treatment decrease self-reported levels of chronic pain?

Patient

Pain before tx

Pain after tx

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

9

5

6

4

3

10

9

9

7

5

2

5

8

3

6

7

7

6

4

3

3

7

6

8

8

4

4

4

5

4

3

4

a) SPSS output

b) SPSS graph

c) Current APA-style Results section

2. A health psychologist in a northern climate wants to evaluate the claim that UV lamps help lower depressive symptoms in middle-aged women. She recruits volunteers who meet the criteria for clinical depression and assigns them to two groups: one group receives a standard treatment for depression and undergoes a half hour of UV lamp therapy each day; the other group receives the same standard treatment for depression but without UV lamp therapy. At the end of two months, she administers a depression inventory where lower scores indicate fewer depressive symptoms (lower levels of depression). Assume all other variables are controlled for in the study. Evaluate the claim that depression treatment plus the UV lamp results in lowerdepression scores than depression treatment alone.

Depression Treatment + UV

Depression

Treatment Only

34

29

43

31

29

25

12

14

31

17

22

19

27

32

39

29

13

41

26

23

47

31

25

14

24

37

41

42





a) SPSS output

b) SPSS graph

c) Current APA-style Results section

3. As part of a new prevention program, a clinical psychologist wants to see whether feelings of alienation differ as a function of immigration status in a local high school. She divides volunteer students into three categories: first-generation immigrants, second-generation immigrants, and non-immigrants. She then administers an instrument assessing feelings of alienation, where higher scores indicate stronger feelings of alienation from peers, adults, and society in general. Is there a difference in alienation scores among these three groups?

First-generation

immigrants

Second-generation

immigrants

Non-immigrants

35

39

34

37

36

23

39

26

37

28

29

36

25

18

29

22

17

25

19

30

16

a) SPSS output

b) SPSS graph

c) Current APA-style Results section

4. In response to media reports of violence on college campuses, a psychologist who works at a local community college decides to study students' perceptions of campus safety. He hopes to use these results to help develop an on-campus violence prevention program. The administration has asked him additionally to look at whether perceptions of safety differ depending on students' year in school and gender. The psychologist administers a questionnaire with possible scores ranging from 1-70, with higher scores indicating higher perceptions of safety on campus, and lower scores indicating perceptions that the campus is less safe. Based on the data collected below, do year in school and/or gender have an effect on perceptions of campus safety?

 

 

 

 

Male

Freshmen

Sophomore

Junior

Senior

39

66

54

66

60

44

32

62

59

29

63

67

46

51

41

45

53

68

57

60

 

 

Female

51

46

45

57

32

 

32

21

30

49

53

56

52

60

47

59

61

55

42

58

61

a) SPSS output

b) SPSS graph

c) Current APA-style Results section

5. A cross-cultural psychologist living in an overseas, non-Western rural area has a background studying culture bias in traditional psychological testing procedures. She contends that members of a rural community who normally score lower than average on traditional Western-style IQ tests will score better than the general population on a new test that emphasizes practical and social intelligence. Scores on the test can range from 1-100.She recruits 18 volunteers and administers the new test. Their scores are as follows:

Practical/Social IQ Scores on New Test

78

63

82

87

74

61

58

88

86

82

64

61

71

67

51

76

53

88

Based on early normative data in Western countries, the mean for the general population is 64. Do members of this community score significantly higher on the new IQ test?

a) SPSS output

b) SPSS graph

c) Current APA-style Results section

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