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11.1: An Illustrative Data Set

  • Page ID
    29520
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    Suppose you’ve become involved in a clinical trial in which you are testing a new antidepressant drug called Joyzepam. In order to construct a fair test of the drug’s effectiveness, the study involves three separate drugs to be administered. One is a placebo, and the other is an existing antidepressant / anti-anxiety drug called Anxifree. A collection of 18 participants with moderate to severe depression are recruited for your initial testing. Because the drugs are sometimes administered along with psychological therapy, your study includes 9 people undergoing cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and 9 who are not. Participants are randomly assigned (doubly blinded, of course) a treatment, such that there are 3 CBT people and 3 no-therapy people assigned to each of the 3 drugs. A psychologist assesses the mood of each person after a 3-month run with each drug: and the overall improvement in each person’s mood is assessed on a scale ranging from −5 to +5.

    With that as the study design, let’s now look at what we’ve got in the data file:

    clipboard_e1aebe854adaf036891db66ed0ace63ba.png

    For the purposes of this chapter, what we’re really interested in is the effect of drug on mood.gain. The first thing to do is calculate some descriptive statistics and draw some graphs. We can use the Analysis/Descriptive Statistics/Explore...menu to see how many people we have in each group, create some descriptive statistics, and draw some graphs, all in one easy step:

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    clipboard_e5522ac7fb729a888b73d5f04be0dda5c.png

    Once you've entered variables and made your choices for plots, click OK and you'll get a plethora of output:

    clipboard_e36acca43b5108fd2fd87dc798d3eb5df.png

    clipboard_eade18c74aeadf5625063fba1a61abf64.png

    The results are shown in Figure 11.1, which plots the average mood gain for all three conditions; error bars show 95% confidence intervals. As the plot makes clear, there is a larger improvement in mood for participants in the Joyzepam group than for either the Anxifree group or the placebo group. The Anxifree group shows a larger mood gain than the control group, but the difference isn’t as large.

    The question that we want to answer is: are these differences “real”, or are they just due to chance?

     

    clipboard_e64bf91ed23eeef9741d7b1b66542924d.png
    Figure 11.1: Average mood gain as a function of drug administered. Error bars depict 95% confidence intervals associated with each of the group means.


    This page titled 11.1: An Illustrative Data Set is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Danielle Navarro.