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      Stats Make Me Cry is a place to share ideas and find answers to your statistics and data analysis questions.  Look around, tell a friend, and come back soon! For in-depth data analysis help, check out our comprehensive consulting services.  I can help if you are a graduate student, someone that is ABD (All But Dissertation), or a professional looking for some statistical perspective. 

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      Entries in regression (4)

      Wednesday
      Jul132011

      Moderating Effects with Seemingly Uncorrelated Variables

      I received a great question this week, as a submission to my Ask the Stats Make Me Cry Guy page, which asked: In order for a moderating relationship to exist, do the predictor IV and dependent variable need to be significantly correlated?". This is a question that I am asked a lot, partly because of the common confusion between mediators and moderators and the commonly held belief that an IV and DV should be related for mediation to be present (see my video blog on Mediators, Moderators, and Supressors for more info on this topic). However, moderators are a completely different story. In fact, a simple correlation between two variables can be very misleading, if one relies on it as an indicator of potential moderating effects and/or as an indicator that moderating effects should be tested.

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      Monday
      Oct252010

      Top Ten Confusing Stats Terms Explained in “Plain English” (#8: Residual)

      When I hear the word "residual", the pulp left over after I drink my orange juice pops into my brain, or perhaps the film left on the car after a heavy rain. However, when my regression model spits out an estimate of my model's residual, I'm fairly confident it isn't referring to OJ or automobile gunk...right? Not so fast, that imagery is more similar to it's statistical meaning than you might initially think.

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      Sunday
      Jul042010

      Bonferroni Correction In Regression: Fun To Say, Important To Do...

      The Bonferroni correction is only one way to guard against the bias of repeated testing effects, but it is probably the most common method and it is definitely the most fun to say. I've come to consider it as critical to the accuracy of my analyses as selecting the correct type of analysis or entering the data accurately. Unfortunately adjustments for repeated testing of hypotheses, as a whole, remains something that is often overlooked by researchers and the consequences may very well be inaccurate results and misleading inferences. In this independence day blog, I'll discuss why the Bonferroni Correction should be as important as apple pie on the 4th of July.

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      Monday
      Apr262010

      Data Transformations: statistical voodoo or truth serum for your data?  

      Anyone that has taken a statistics class has probably learned about transforming data, at one time or another (although you may be in denial about it). In short, you may want to transform your data if you need to perform a parametric analysis, but the inherent assumptions are violated in your dataset.

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