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2.4: Two Broad Categories of the Process of Using Statistics

  • Page ID
    49367
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    Using statistics involves two broad categories of statistics. The first is descriptive statistics. The second is inferential statistics. These two categories are conducted in the order of descriptive statistics first and inferential statistics second.

    Descriptive Statistics – Start Here

    First, use descriptive statistics. Our first step is to simply describe what we got in our data. Think of this first step as the first step of cooking. You take stock of your ingredients and how much you have of each ingredient. In statistics, you want to take stock of what variables you have. For each variable, take inventory of how that variable varies by type or by amount. Then, you decide what you know about how much of each variable you have. By how much, we mean the level, the scores or the numbers that represent the level of each variable.

    The descriptive statistics usually consist of three values. They are a) your frequency counts, b) your measures of central tendency, otherwise known as the mean, and c) your measures of the spread of score, otherwise known as the standard deviation. These descriptive statistics help you organize your data into your variable sets and describe how much, or the level, you have of each variable.

    Conducting descriptive statistics is ALWAYS the FIRST STEP in conducting statistical analysis. Resist the temptation to dive right into your statistical analysis to answer your hypotheses. You first want to take stock of what you have in your variables.

    Inferential Statistics – Next Step

    Second, use inferential statistics. I am going to infer (estimate, guess) that if I look at those two variables, I can see a relationship between self-esteem and depression. We infer the truth about everything by making a guess about what we have in front of us. We infer a parameter by estimating a relationship based on our sample.

    Inferential statistics are your classic statistics analysis. These analyses are your t-tests, ANOVA, correlation, regression, and Chi-square. These are the common statistical analyses that answer most questions we have in statistics.


    This page titled 2.4: Two Broad Categories of the Process of Using Statistics is shared under a CC BY license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.