2 "m"s, 1 "t" :-) Haha! I love you I/O guys - you're the best! Always making us feel like our (perhaps negligible) weaknesses are alright by exaggerating your own :-) Thank you so much for this!
Bear with me here...beginner/intermediate level here: So, 2 regressions next to each other, right? Say, with high and low positive listed separately underneath the main x-axis heading of Job Satisfaction and then plotted next to each other on the same graph?
Live long and prosper 🖖. Awesome video.
🤣 'Spokian mind! This is awesome, well explained and easy to understand. Live long and prosper 🖖
Thanks for the content, it was a big help!
2 "m"s, 1 "t" :-) Haha! I love you I/O guys - you're the best! Always making us feel like our (perhaps negligible) weaknesses are alright by exaggerating your own :-) Thank you so much for this!
Thanks this helped a lot!
Thank you! Very good explanation, helped a lot
What would a non-significant 3 way interaction look like?
Statistics for Dummies = me.
Well you can subsample the third variable and run 2 regressions, making it easier to interpret
Bear with me here...beginner/intermediate level here: So, 2 regressions next to each other, right? Say, with high and low positive listed separately underneath the main x-axis heading of Job Satisfaction and then plotted next to each other on the same graph?
@@brookielee3121 yes and look at the two way moderation term on both regression subsampled using the third variable at, say median