Use SPSS to reproduce the results that R gave you in Exercise 18.14. Exercise 18.14 The combined
Question:
Use SPSS to reproduce the results that R gave you in Exercise 18.14.
Exercise 18.14
The combined data for Exercises 18.10 and 18.12 are presented in the data file named Ex18.14.
I have added another variable named Group and coded it 1 and 2. This is a between-subject variable. Go to the website for the chapter and load Between1Within1.r. Run that and interpret the results.
Exercises 18.10
St. Lawrence, Brasfield, Shirley, Jefferson, Alleyne, and O’Brannon (1995) investigated the effects of an eight-week Behavioral Skills Training (BST) program aimed at reducing the risk of HIV infection among African-American adolescents. The study followed males and females from a pretest to a 12-month follow-up, recording the frequency of condom-protected sex.
(They also had a control condition, but I am going to look only at the males in the BST condition for this exercise.) The actual dependent variable is 1,000 times the natural logarithm of the frequency of protected sex. (I multiplied the log by 1,000 to eliminate decimal values.)
The data for males follow.
Exercises 18.12
In the study discussed in Exercise 18.10, the authors also ran a control group under the same conditions, but without the BST intervention. Those data (for males) follow.
Step by Step Answer:
Fundamental Statistics For The Behavioral Sciences
ISBN: 9781305652972
9th Edition
Authors: David C. Howell