Autor des Abschnitts: Danielle J. Navarro and David R. Foxcroft
Analyse kategorialer Daten
Now that we have covered the basic theory behind hypothesis testing, it is time to start looking at specific tests that are commonly used in psychology. So where should we start? Not every textbook agrees on where to start, but I am going to start with “χ² tests” (“Categorical data analysis”, this chapter) and “t-tests” (chapter Vergleich zweier Mittelwerte). Both of these tools are very frequently used in scientific practice, and whilst they are not as powerful as “regression” (chapter Korrelation und lineare Regression) and “Analysis of Variance” (chapters Vergleich mehrerer Mittelwerte (einfaktorielle ANOVA) and Faktorielle ANOVA) they are much easier to understand. Finally, there is Faktorenanalyse that aims to describe the variability among observed, correlated variables in terms of a lower number of unobserved variables called factors or latent Variables.
The term “categorical data” in the title of this chapter is just another name
for “nominal scale data” . It is nothing that we have not already
discussed, it is just that in the context of data analysis people tend to use
the term “categorical data” rather than “nominal scale data”. I do not know why.
In any case, categorical data analysis refers to a collection of tools that
you can use when your data are nominal scale
. Those tools are often
called “χ² tests” (pronounced “chi-square”, sometimes “chi-squared”). They
determine whether there is a statistically significant difference between
expected and observed frequencies and whether the observations follows a χ²
frequency distribution. However, there are a lot of different tools that can be
used for categorical data analysis, and this chapter covers only a few of the
more common ones.