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Case Study

Analyze Dr. Singh's conclusion based on the results of her one-way ANOVA. Identify the error in her statistical reasoning and explain what follow-up analysis is required to determine if her conclusion about the Silent environment is statistically justified.

Case context: Dr. Singh is testing the effect of four different study environments (Silent, Classical Music, White Noise, and Coffee Shop Chat) on students' concentration test scores. She runs a one-way ANOVA and finds a significant result, rejecting the null hypothesis. Dr. Singh immediately writes in her report, 'The Silent environment is significantly better for concentration than the other three environments.' She bases this on the fact that the Silent group had the highest sample mean score.

Question: Analyze Dr. Singh's conclusion based on the results of her one-way ANOVA. Identify the error in her statistical reasoning and explain what follow-up analysis is required to determine if her conclusion about the Silent environment is statistically justified.

Sample answer: Dr. Singh's conclusion is flawed because a significant one-way ANOVA only indicates that not all population group means are equal; it does not pinpoint which specific groups differ. She cannot conclude that the Silent environment is significantly better based solely on the highest sample mean and the overall ANOVA result. To justify her claim, she must conduct post hoc comparisons. These follow-up analyses will compare specific pairs of group means (e.g., Silent vs. Classical Music, Silent vs. White Noise) to determine exactly which study environments are significantly different from each other.

Key points:

  • A significant one-way ANOVA only shows that not all population means are equal.
  • The ANOVA itself does not specify which ones differ, even if one sample mean is visibly highest.
  • The researcher made an error by drawing a specific conclusion from the overall test alone.
  • Post hoc comparisons must be conducted to pinpoint specific differences.
  • Post hoc comparisons involve analyzing selected pairs of group means.

Rubric: The response must identify that the ANOVA does not pinpoint specific differences and explain that post hoc comparisons are needed to compare pairs of means.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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