-
Recent Posts
- New York Times: “Study Links Autism with Antidepressant Use During Pregnancy”–Misleading or just plain wrong?
- Nature versus nurture: Questioning a cornerstone of psychology
- Is the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale Outdated (When are Statistics too Simple)?
- What it means when “no significant differences were found”
- How can we study what we can’t measure?
Recent Comments
Archives
Categories
- assumptions
- bell curve
- bell-shaped curve
- Car Fax report
- certification
- change
- credit history
- dimensionality
- experience
- experimental method
- financial reporting
- free will
- God
- grade inflation
- grading
- Great Delusion
- human dimensions
- hypothesis testing
- mixed methods research
- nature vs nurture
- noëtic dimension
- normalization of scores
- prayer
- purpose
- qualitative research
- quantitative research
- regression
- research
- research methods
- standard deviation
- statistical significance
- statistics
- technology
- testing
- Uncategorized
Meta
Category Archives: prayer
What it means when “no significant differences were found”
In lay terms, what was done here was the equivalent of testing batteries by putting them in a flashlight and turning on the switch. If the flashlight lit up, then we can naturally conclude that the batteries are good. This is the equivalent of finding a statistically significant difference (the bulb turned on). But what if the flashlight did not light up? Continue reading