Hi, that's a good question. Very often the t-test value is not included because the t is what gives you the significance but is not considered the same thing as (for example) the independent samples t-test. You can include the t value in the table if you prefer (or of the journal or professor wants it) but very often when I read published regression analyses there is no t-value included. The standardized beta weight is your effect size, and the p-value of course is important. If the sample size if very large, then you'll get a small p-value even when the standardized beta is trivial in magnitude. The combination of beta and p-value makes the t-value somewhat redundant. But as I said, you could include it if you like and it would not be wrong (just redundant).
I would describe the model F and R^2 in sentence format when I describe the table, but the model significance F test and R^2 normally are not placed inside the table.
Two reasons: Excel can't do everything that SPSS can, and a person might be already analyzing data in SPSS so it is several steps to also set up the data in Excel and create the table. At some level this is merely personal preference.
@@psychedvideos2852 Thanks for the reply. I don't mean to do the analysis in Excell, I mean to export the table from SPSS as an xls file, open it in Excel and then re-format it to APA 7 style. The table can then be copied and pasted from Excell into Word. That is fewer steps than your method here because it does not require creating a new table.
@@BaritoneLondon Sure, one could do that. Matter of preference. I find making tables in Word to be very easy and I have a lot of templates I've made over time.
Great video..can you pin a copy of a filliable table so folks can easily fill in the data into the APA formatted table?
Thank you. This is what I have been looking for.
Hi, this was very helpful. Would I include the T value in the table or would I describe the T value in sentence format when I describe the table?
Hi, that's a good question. Very often the t-test value is not included because the t is what gives you the significance but is not considered the same thing as (for example) the independent samples t-test. You can include the t value in the table if you prefer (or of the journal or professor wants it) but very often when I read published regression analyses there is no t-value included. The standardized beta weight is your effect size, and the p-value of course is important. If the sample size if very large, then you'll get a small p-value even when the standardized beta is trivial in magnitude. The combination of beta and p-value makes the t-value somewhat redundant. But as I said, you could include it if you like and it would not be wrong (just redundant).
Is it possible to summarize four multiple regression analyses into one table? Are there maybe examples for doing so?
I've seen this done with sections within a table, but it gets confusing rather quickly.
this was beyond helpful!! thank you.
how would you report these same variables in written format ??
That's a good question...I'll make an update in a day or two to illustrate the written results.
Nice job! Thanks for sharing.
This helped me a lot. Thank you! already pressed the like button :)
Do you still report r squared and f despite not including it in the table?
I would describe the model F and R^2 in sentence format when I describe the table, but the model significance F test and R^2 normally are not placed inside the table.
Are you abble to provide the original output from SSPS?
Would've been nice if you shared the document
Is there a way to add a word document to the youtube page? If so, I'm not aware of it.
@@psychedvideos2852 you'd have to share a word doc in google docs and post the link in the description, I believe.
Why don't you just export the table to Excel and edit it? This seems a rather more labour-intensive way of doing it.
Two reasons: Excel can't do everything that SPSS can, and a person might be already analyzing data in SPSS so it is several steps to also set up the data in Excel and create the table. At some level this is merely personal preference.
@@psychedvideos2852 Thanks for the reply. I don't mean to do the analysis in Excell, I mean to export the table from SPSS as an xls file, open it in Excel and then re-format it to APA 7 style. The table can then be copied and pasted from Excell into Word. That is fewer steps than your method here because it does not require creating a new table.
@@BaritoneLondon Sure, one could do that. Matter of preference. I find making tables in Word to be very easy and I have a lot of templates I've made over time.
Thank you for your valuable lesson