Table of contents : Cover......Page 1 Title Page......Page 2 Copyright Page......Page 3 Dedication......Page 4 Contents......Page 6 Preface......Page 10 Acknowledgments......Page 12 Global Edition Acknowledgments......Page 13 1.1 Introduction to Statistical Methodology......Page 14 1.2 Descriptive Statistics and Inferential Statistics......Page 17 1.3 The Role of Computers and Software in Statistics......Page 19 1.4 Chapter Summary......Page 21 2.1 Variables and Their Measurement......Page 24 2.2 Randomization......Page 27 2.3 Sampling Variability and Potential Bias......Page 30 2.4 Other Probability Sampling Methods*......Page 34 2.5 Chapter Summary......Page 36 3.1 Describing Data with Tables and Graphs......Page 42 3.2 Describing the Center of the Data......Page 48 3.3 Describing Variability of the Data......Page 54 3.4 Measures of Position......Page 59 3.5 Bivariate Descriptive Statistics......Page 64 3.7 Chapter Summary......Page 68 4.1 Introduction to Probability......Page 80 4.2 Probability Distributions for Discrete and Continuous Variables......Page 82 4.3 The Normal Probability Distribution......Page 85 4.4 Sampling Distributions Describe How Statistics Vary......Page 93 4.5 Sampling Distributions of Sample Means......Page 98 4.6 Review: Population, Sample Data, and Sampling Distributions......Page 104 4.7 Chapter Summary......Page 107 5.1 Point and Interval Estimation......Page 116 5.2 Confidence Interval for a Proportion......Page 119 5.3 Confidence Interval for a Mean......Page 126 5.4 Choice of Sample Size......Page 133 5.5 Estimation Methods: Maximum Likelihood and the Bootstrap*......Page 139 5.6 Chapter Summary......Page 143 6 Statistical Inference: Significance Tests......Page 152 6.1 The Five Parts of a Significance Test......Page 153 6.2 Significance Test for a Mean......Page 156 6.3 Significance Test for a Proportion......Page 165 6.4 Decisions and Types of Errors in Tests......Page 168 6.5 Limitations of Significance Tests......Page 172 6.6 Finding P(Type II Error)*......Page 176 6.7 Small-Sample Test for a Proportion—the Binomial Distribution*......Page 178 6.8 Chapter Summary......Page 182 7.1 Preliminaries for Comparing Groups......Page 192 7.2 Categorical Data: Comparing Two Proportions......Page 195 7.3 Quantitative Data: Comparing Two Means......Page 200 7.4 Comparing Means with Dependent Samples......Page 203 7.5 Other Methods for Comparing Means*......Page 206 7.6 Other Methods for Comparing Proportions*......Page 211 7.7 Nonparametric Statistics for Comparing Groups*......Page 214 7.8 Chapter Summary......Page 217 8.1 Contingency Tables......Page 228 8.2 Chi-Squared Test of Independence......Page 231 8.3 Residuals: Detecting the Pattern of Association......Page 238 8.4 Measuring Association in Contingency Tables......Page 240 8.5 Association Between Ordinal Variables*......Page 246 8.6 Chapter Summary......Page 251 9.1 Linear Relationships......Page 260 9.2 Least Squares Prediction Equation......Page 263 9.3 The Linear Regression Model......Page 269 9.4 Measuring Linear Association: The Correlation......Page 272 9.5 Inferences for the Slope and Correlation......Page 279 9.6 Model Assumptions and Violations......Page 285 9.7 Chapter Summary......Page 290 10.1 Association and Causality......Page 300 10.2 Controlling for Other Variables......Page 303 10.3 Types of Multivariate Relationships......Page 307 10.4 Inferential Issues in Statistical Control......Page 312 10.5 Chapter Summary......Page 314 11.1 The Multiple Regression Model......Page 320 11.2 Multiple Correlation and R2......Page 329 11.3 Inferences for Multiple Regression Coefficients......Page 333 11.4 Modeling Interaction Effects......Page 338 11.5 Comparing Regression Models......Page 342 11.6 Partial Correlation*......Page 344 11.7 Standardized Regression Coefficients*......Page 347 11.8 Chapter Summary......Page 350 12.1 Regression Modeling with Dummy Variables for Categories......Page 364 12.2 Multiple Comparisons of Means......Page 368 12.3 Comparing Several Means: Analysis of Variance......Page 371 12.4 Two-Way ANOVA and Regression Modeling......Page 375 12.5 Repeated-Measures Analysis of Variance*......Page 382 12.6 Two-Way ANOVA with Repeated Measures on a Factor*......Page 386 12.7 Chapter Summary......Page 391 13.1 Models with Quantitative and Categorical Explanatory Variables......Page 400 13.2 Inference for Regression with Quantitative and Categorical Predictors......Page 407 13.3 Case Studies: Using Multiple Regression in Research......Page 410 13.4 Adjusted Means*......Page 414 13.5 The Linear Mixed Model*......Page 419 13.6 Chapter Summary......Page 424 14.1 Model Selection Procedures......Page 432 14.2 Regression Diagnostics......Page 439 14.3 Effects of Multicollinearity......Page 446 14.4 Generalized Linear Models......Page 448 14.5 Nonlinear Relationships: Polynomial Regression......Page 452 14.6 Exponential Regression and Log Transforms*......Page 457 14.7 Robust Variances and Nonparametric Regression*......Page 461 14.8 Chapter Summary......Page 463 15.1 Logistic Regression......Page 472 15.2 Multiple Logistic Regression......Page 478 15.3 Inference for Logistic Regression Models......Page 483 15.4 Logistic Regression Models for Ordinal Variables*......Page 485 15.5 Logistic Models for Nominal Responses*......Page 490 15.6 Loglinear Models for Categorical Variables*......Page 493 15.7 Model Goodness-of-Fit Tests for Contingency Tables*......Page 497 15.8 Chapter Summary......Page 501 Appendix: R, Stata, SPSS, and SAS for Statistical Analyses......Page 510 Bibliography......Page 546 Credits......Page 550 C......Page 552 G......Page 553 M......Page 554 P......Page 555 S......Page 556 T......Page 557 Z......Page 558 Back Cover......Page 564