You are on page 1of 3

Dakotah Moy

Dr. Bimpe Diji


Psych 2050-70
October 22nd, 2021

Assignment 3
1)
a) The pattern shown on the scatterplot appears to be linear. The association also appears
to be a positive linear association.

b) The pattern of the dots in the scatterplot is positive. Both correlations for x and y are 1.

2)
A) The pattern is a negative linear association.
B) Pattern of the dots on the scatterplot is weak negative.

3) As Johnson and Wilson state in their article “all told, there is a relatively small
correlation between job fitness and salary.”. But this is actually incorrect because there is
not a relationship between the two. The relationship is a random relationship. The
different personalities and salaries differ from one another. Two people tend to not have
the same personality meaning they may be paid for the same job more than the other.

4) Likely to correlation positively. Scales are 2.63944 and 2.562655 for standard
deviations.

5) The correlation between biological sex and physical arousal is a positive relationship.
While psychological arousal correlates with -.196 meaning it is a negative relationship.
6) Bootcamp intervals allow us to estimate statistics such as standard deviation and mean
that helps to quantify and display the data.

7) There's a correlation between the two but it's not significant.

8) There's a positive, significant effect.

9) Data shopping exercise is not an as significant relationship.

10) There's a modesty positively relationship.


a) The null hypothesis would be there is no relationship between a student's motivation
and their GPA. While the alternative hypothesis is that there's a relationship between a
student's motivation and their GPA.

b) its significant relationship between the two.


c) Attached
Works Cited
Field, A. (2018). Discovering statistics using IBM SPSS statistics (5th ed.). SAGE
Publications.

Green, S. B., Salkind, N. J., & Green, S. B. (2017). Using SPSS for Windows and
Macintosh: Analyzing and understanding data (8th ed.). Upper Saddle River, N.J:
Prentice Hall.
Johnson, D., & Wilson, C. (2016, September 15). The 13 High-Paying Jobs You Don’t

Want to Have. Time. https://time.com/4487297/high-paying-jobs-personality/

You might also like