Thanks for the video - it was very helpful! I would love to see how you create and format your tables, as this is something I've been struggling with. :) Great video!
Is it possible to have a result of a low mean but when it comes to the relationship with another variable they are significant? (Example: high dose taking participants (M=5, SD= 1.58), placebo taking participants (M=2.2, SD= 1.30), Low dose taking participants (M=3.2, SD= 1.3). High dose, and placebo (p= .039), high dose and low dose (p= .0815), low dose and placebo (p= .479). What should be my finding result? Thank you in advance!
Thanks for the video - it was very helpful! I would love to see how you create and format your tables, as this is something I've been struggling with. :) Great video!
thank you for the suggestion! I will include it in the to-do list.
Great, I was looking for something similar for my report. Thanks for the video!
Thanks for the video!!
Thank you for this video. It was very helpful
Is it possible to have a result of a low mean but when it comes to the relationship with another variable they are significant?
(Example: high dose taking participants (M=5, SD= 1.58), placebo taking participants (M=2.2, SD= 1.30), Low dose taking participants (M=3.2, SD= 1.3). High dose, and placebo (p= .039), high dose and low dose (p= .0815), low dose and placebo (p= .479).
What should be my finding result? Thank you in advance!
The results seem to suggest that taking a high dosage leads to a significant increase in your DV, but not for a low dosage.