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Charles G. Minard – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Controlling Type 1 error and encouraging reproducible research are important in clinical and translational research. These concepts are frequently discussed in lectures with mathematical language, analytic examples, and probability distributions that demonstrate the issues. However, first-time learners in biostatistics courses focusing on…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Error Patterns, Probability, Demonstrations (Educational)
Brandon Riley Waldon – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Natural language contains a variety of means for expressing possibilities consistent with what is known. Particularly well-studied among them are the epistemic modal auxiliaries "might" and "must": (1) a. Ann: "Where is Peter?" b. Mary: "He {might/must} be in his office." There is broad agreement that…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Linguistics, Philosophy, Probability
Takahiko Fujita; Naohiro Yoshida – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
Two novel proofs show that the sum of a specific pair of normal random variables is not normal are established in this note. This is one of the most often misunderstood facts by first-year students in probability theory and statistics. The first proof is concise using the moment generating function. The second proof checks whether the moments of…
Descriptors: Mathematical Logic, Validity, Probability, Statistics
David Menendez; Andrea Marquardt Donovan; Olympia N. Mathiaparanam; Vienne Seitz; Nour F. Sabbagh; Rebecca E. Klapper; Charles W. Kalish; Karl S. Rosengren; Martha W. Alibali – Child Development, 2024
Do children think of genetic inheritance as deterministic or probabilistic? In two novel tasks, children viewed the eye colors of animal parents and judged and selected possible phenotypes of offspring. Across three studies (N = 353, 162 girls, 172 boys, 2 non-binary; 17 did not report gender) with predominantly White U.S. participants collected…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Beliefs, Genetics, Probability
Philip Dawid; Macartan Humphreys; Monica Musio – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
Suppose "X" and "Y" are binary exposure and outcome variables, and we have full knowledge of the distribution of "Y," given application of "X." We are interested in assessing whether an outcome in some case is due to the exposure. This "probability of causation" is of interest in comparative…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Intervals, Probability, Qualitative Research
David Voas; Laura Watt – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Binary logistic regression is one of the most widely used statistical tools. The method uses odds, log odds, and odds ratios, which are difficult to understand and interpret. Understanding of logistic regression tends to fall down in one of three ways: (1) Many students and researchers come to believe that an odds ratio translates directly into…
Descriptors: Statistics, Statistics Education, Regression (Statistics), Misconceptions
Jennifer Timmer; Joshua Bleiberg; David Woo – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Background: Though approximately 80% of teachers are women, they hold only about 50% of all principalships, and just a quarter of superintendent positions (Finnan and McCord, 2017; Robinson et al., 2017; Tienken, 2021; White, 2023). When women do take on leadership positions, evidence suggests they tend to work in districts serving students with…
Descriptors: Accountability, Superintendents, Women Faculty, Women Administrators
Brooke C. Hilton; Mark A. Sabbagh – Child Development, 2025
This study investigated 3- to 5-year-olds' (N = 64, 37 girls, 62.5% White, data collected between 2021-2022) ability to use probabilistic information gleaned through active search to appropriately change or maintain expectations. In an online fishing game, children first learned that one of two ponds was good for catching fish. During a subsequent…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Probability, Evidence, Educational Games
Schmid, Matthias; Friede, Tim; Klein, Nadja; Weinhold, Leonie – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Recent years have seen the development of many novel scoring tools for disease prognosis and prediction. To become accepted for use in clinical applications, these tools have to be validated on external data. In practice, validation is often hampered by logistical issues, resulting in multiple small-sized validation studies. It is therefore…
Descriptors: Probability, Meta Analysis, Time, Test Validity
Daniel Gilmore; Brittany N. Hand – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Diabetes mellitus is a challenging chronic health condition at the forefront of attention of the healthcare system. Important estimates quantifying how diabetes prevalence varies by age are available for the general population, but these estimates are poorly characterized among autistic adults. Improved diabetes prevalence and likelihood estimates…
Descriptors: Diabetes, Health Insurance, Adults, Autism Spectrum Disorders
Karlson, Kristian Bernt; Popham, Frank; Holm, Anders – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
This article presents two ways of quantifying confounding using logistic response models for binary outcomes. Drawing on the distinction between marginal and conditional odds ratios in statistics, we define two corresponding measures of confounding (marginal and conditional) that can be recovered from a simple standardization approach. We…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Probability, Standards, Mediation Theory
Aidai Golan; Dominique Lamy – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
There is growing consensus that selection history strongly guides spatial attention and is distinct from current goals and physical salience. Here, we focused on target-location probability cueing: when the target is more likely to appear in one region, search performance gradually improves for targets appearing in that region. Probability cueing…
Descriptors: Attention, Spatial Ability, Cues, Probability
Aoqi Li; Johan Hulleman; Jeremy M. Wolfe – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
In any visual search task in the lab or in the world, observers will make errors. Those errors can be categorized as "deterministic": If you miss this target in this display once, you will definitely miss it again. Alternatively, errors can be "stochastic", occurring randomly with some probability from trial to trial.…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli, Error Patterns, Probability
John Mart V. DelosReyes; Miguel A. Padilla – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
Estimating confidence intervals (CIs) for the correlation has been a challenge because the correlation sampling distribution changes depending on the correlation magnitude. The Fisher z-transformation was one of the first attempts at estimating correlation CIs but has historically shown to not have acceptable coverage probability if data were…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Correlation, Intervals, Computation
David A. Klingbeil; Alexander D. Latham; Jessica S. Kim; Madeline C. Schmitt – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Several researchers have called for schools to interpret universal screening results using posterior probabilities. Following this recommendation could require schools to move away from direct-route, single-measure screening unless base rates of risk fall within a narrow range. In this descriptive study, we investigated two questions surrounding…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Mathematics Skills, Screening Tests, Test Results