Homework 2 Solutions
By Ashley Van Reynolds (adapted from previous solutions)
updated Jan 2021
Scoring:
15 completion points, 5 accuracy
Accuracy
... [Show More] points on problems 5a,b,c, 6b
Problem 1 (3 completion point)
Drummond and Vowler (2011) make six suggestions for presenting data in bullet points at
the bottom of the first page. Write 1-2 sentences summarizing each one.**
Homework 2 Solutions (Lecture 1 W21) 2/5/21, 1:03 AM
file:///Users/ana/Downloads/Assignment%20Solutions%2021W/Homew…0Solutions/Homework%202%20Solutions%20(Lecture%201%20W21).html Page 2 of 11
1. Display data in their raw form
If possible, show each individual data point. Otherwise, summarize (as with a histogram)
without adjusting or eliminating values or just giving summary values.
2. A dot plot is a good start
Dot plots are good visualizations because they show data and its features in a transparent
way, without hiding the data or withholding information.. However, there are better options if
you have a lot of data points.
3. 'Dynamite plunger plots' conceal data
Using bar plots with error bars hides valuable information about the underlying data (such as
the distribution of the data) and at worst is misleading. These provide almost no information,
hiding the number of participants, confidence intervals, spread of data, and several other
factors.
4. Check the pattern of the distribution of the values
The distribution is an important feature of the data and should always be inspected to study
skew, modality, tails, variance, and outliers. Checking the pattern could indicate other factors
affecting the values or sample.
5. Take care when samples are small
The smaller the sample, the less certain you are about the distribution, measures of central
tendency, and any statistical analysis that is applied. Small samples can very easily fail to be
reflective of a population.
6. Choose appropriate measures of distribution or dispersion
The standard deviation (SD) and standard error of the mean (SEM) are appropriate only if
the data are bell-shaped (i.e., distribution is unimodal, symmetric, and thin tailed).
Confidence intervals are preferable and can be used if the sample size is sufficiently large.
Be aware of the different types of tests and measurements you can use for examining data
and choose appropriate ones for the test you are conducting and its possible future uses. [Show Less]