1 / 18

Chapter 6

Chapter 6. Two-Way Tables . Association. To study associations between quantitative variables  correlation & regression (Ch 4 & Ch 5) To study associations between categorical variables  cross-tabulate frequencies & calculate conditional percents (this Chapter). Variables.

tyne
Download Presentation

Chapter 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Two-Way Tables Chapter 6

  2. Association • To study associations between quantitative variables correlation & regression (Ch 4 & Ch 5) • To study associations between categorical variables  cross-tabulate frequencies & calculate conditional percents (this Chapter) Chapter 6

  3. Variables Example: Age and Education “Age groups” is the categorical explanatory variable “Education level” is the categorical response variable Marginal distributions Chapter 6

  4. Variables 27,85858,07744,46544,828 37,786 81,435 56,008 Marginal totals Example: Marginal Totals Chapter 6

  5. Marginal Distributions Marginal distributions are used as background information only. They do not address association Chapter 6

  6. Marginal Distribution, Row Variable Chapter 6

  7. Marginal Distribution, Column Variable BPS Chapter 6 7

  8. Association To determine associations, calculate conditional distributions (conditional percents) Two types of conditional distributions: Conditioned on row variable Conditioned on column variable BPS Chapter 6 8

  9. Association • If explanatory variable is in rows • calculate row percents • analyze row conditional distributions Chapter 6

  10. Association • If explanatory variable is in columns • calculate column percents • analyze column conditional distribution BPS Chapter 6 10

  11. Example: Column Percents Is AGE associated with EDUCATION? AGE is explanatory var.  use column percents Chapter 6

  12. Example: Association As age goes up, % completing college goes down NEGATIVE association between age and education Chapter 6

  13. Association • No association: conditional percents nearly equal at all levels of explanatory variable • Positive association: as explanatory variable rises  conditional percentages increase • Negative associations: as explanatory variable rises  conditional percentages go down Chapter 6

  14. Statement of problem: Is ACCEPTANCE into a graduate program (response variable) predicted by GENDER (explanatory variable)? Example 2: Row Percent Explanatory variable (gender) is in rows  use row percents BPS Chapter 6 14

  15. Example 2 Statement of problem: Is ACCEPTANCE associated with GENDER? Explanatory variable in rows  use row percents Therefore: positive association with “maleness” BPS Chapter 6 15

  16. Simpson’s Paradox Lurking variables can change or even reverse the direction of an association • In example 2, consider the lurking variable "major” • Business School (240 applicants) • Art School (320 applicants) • Does this lurking variable explain the association? • To address this potential problem, subdivide the data according to the lurking variable Chapter 6

  17. Simpson’s Paradox Illustration Chapter 6

  18. Simpson’s Paradox Illustration • Overall: higher proportion of men accepted than women • Within majors  higher proportion of women accepted than men • Reason Men applied to easier majors  the initial association was an artifact of the lurking variable “MAJOR applied to” Chapter 6

More Related