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4.3: Reviewing Journal Articles for Frequency Distributions for Categorical Variables

  • Page ID
    49887
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    When reviewing journal articles and their statistical analysis, reviewing categorical distributions is a good first step in determining how the results answer a research question. Here’s a sample checklist of questions when reviewing.

    1. Identify the research question and the purpose of the study.
    2. What kind of population is the focus of the study?
    3. Your aim is to address this question: do the sample demographics represent the population demographics?
    4. Is this sample a good estimate of the population parameter? Does this sample represent the population?
    5. Fourth step – review each demographic variable. Does the number or percentage in the sample represent what you expect to see in the sample?
    6. The answer is (a) yes, it is expected, (b) no, it is not.
    7. If (b) Is there an anomaly? i.e., Is the value too high or too low?
    8. Is the category demographic underrepresented? Too many of a certain category?
    9. If it is not expected, then explain how that happened. Review the recruitment procedure and review the study’s setting.
    10. Fifth step – conclusion. Did the sample characteristics (i.e., the demographics) represent the population?
    11. Any anomalies? If so, do the anomalies matter? Would these anomalies undermine any conclusion you are trying to draw?
    12. Did the researchers get a good sample representation?

    This page titled 4.3: Reviewing Journal Articles for Frequency Distributions for Categorical Variables is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.