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Statistical Methods for the Social and Behavioral Sciences
81
Citations
8
References
1990
Year
EngineeringStatistical ProceduresSocial PsychologyPsychometricsSocial SciencesPsychologyPsychological EvaluationStatisticsBehavioral SciencesStatistical MethodsSocial ImpactApplied Social PsychologyEducational StatisticsSocial CharacteristicDescriptive StatisticSociologyQuantitative Social Science ResearchNonparametric MethodsSurvey Methodology
Statistical Methods for the Social and Behavioral Sciences consists of 50 chapters organized into 9 parts. In Parts III-VII, statistical procedures are presented by distribution: methods based on exact distributions (Part III), normal distribution (Part IV), chi-square distribution (Part V), t distribu- tion (Part VI), and F distribution (Part VII). Exercises are included at the end of each chapter; answers selected problems are presented at the back of the book. A list of additional readings, arranged by parts, appears near the end of the book. Definitions are indicated in the index by boldface numbers; procedures are marked by italic numbers. The book was for the second statistics course in psychology, education, and other social science disciplines.., .and is well-suited both one- and two-semester courses.... The book progresses through an exten- sive of two-factor designs and a preview of higher designs analy- sis of covariance, regression analysis, and log-linear analysis (book jacket). Multiple sample tests are addressed prior of variance. Para- metric and nonparametric methods are presented on an equal basis, and concepts are developed as they are needed. The purpose of and assump- tions underlying each statistical technique are emphasized. A step-by-step how to summary of statistical procedures is given in boxes in each chap- ter. Examples stress application and interpretation. Simple algebraic developments are included in the body of each chapter; more advanced developments appear in a technical appendix at the end of the chapter. The book has several strengths. It is well written and easy understand. Mathematical skill demand is minimal; a one-semester high school or un- dergraduate college algebra course will enable the reader work through the book. Concepts are presented simply and are built on throughout suc- cessive chapters. Many presentations are intuitively appealing and elegant in their simplicity. The text is remarkably free of spelling and formula errors. (The odds-ratio formula on p. 711 is incorrect; see Kleinbaum, Kupper, & Morgenstern, 1982; Knoke & Burke, 1980.) Boxes are used present an easy-to-understand, step-by-step summary of statistical proce- dures. Parallel treatment of parametric and nonparametric methods is well
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