IBM SPSS SamplePower 3 Easy Interface Manual
IBM SPSS SamplePower 3 Easy Interface Manual
IBM SPSS SamplePower 3 Easy Interface Manual
The option at the left takes you to the classic interface. This is intended for people who are familiar with power analysis It includes a wide variety of procedures, including tests for means, proportions, correlations, survival studies, among others It includes the new module for cluster randomized trials
The option at the right takes you to the new, easy interface This is intended for people who are new to power analysis It will find sample size for six of the most common statistical tests It will walk you through the analysis step-by-step
2. A WORKED EXAMPLE
Once inside the procedure, select Show a worked example. The program will let you select from one of several examples, and will use this example to explain the process of finding the appropriate sample size.
THATS
IT!
One group Your goal is to estimate a value in one group. For example, you want to estimate the proportion of people who support a candidate, or the mean rating assigned to a movie, or the mean score on a test. Two groups Your goal is to compare values in two groups. For example you want to see if men are more likely (or less likely) than women to support a specific candidate, to see if men rate a movie as being better (or worse) than women, or to see if men score higher (or lower) than women on a test.
Categorical People will be choosing from a limited number of responses that do not follow a natural sequence. For example, Which candidate do you support?. (We cannot say that Smith is more than Jones) Ordinal People will be choosing from a limited number of responses that do follow a natural sequence. For example, Rate a movie on a scale of 1 to 4. (We can say that 4 is a higher rating than 2) Continuous Use this when people will be assigned a score (such as a test score) that follows a natural sequence.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Click Design to set the number of categories Enter the proportion expected to support each candidate Select the response that we want to focus on in the analysis (Smith) Enter the percent missing data (0%) Enter the desired margin of error (3%) The program shows the required sample size as 1,025 Click Report to generate a detailed report
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Click Design to set the number of categories Enter the proportion expected to give each response Enter the percent missing data (0%) Enter the desired margin of error (2%) The program shows the required sample size as 142 Click Report to generate a detailed report
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Click Design to set the range for the scale Enter the expected mean (500) Enter the expected standard deviation (100) Enter the percent missing data (0%) Enter the desired margin of error (10 points) The program shows the required sample size as 387 Click Report to generate a detailed report
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Click Design to set the number of categories For men, enter the proportion expected to support each candidate For women, enter the proportion expected to support each candidate Select the response that we want to focus on in the analysis (Smith) Enter the percent missing data The program shows the required sample size as 388 per group Click Report to generate a detailed report
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Click Design to set the number of categories For men, enter the proportion expected to give each response For women, enter the proportion expected to give each response Enter the percent missing data The program shows the required sample size as 151 per group Click Report to generate a detailed report
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Click Design to set the range for the scale Enter the expected mean for the tutored group (550) Enter the expected mean for the control group (500) Enter the common standard deviation (100) Enter the percent missing data (0%) The program shows the required sample size as 64 per group Click Report to generate a detailed report
MISSING DATA
When we are dealing with ordinal or continuous data, those who fail to respond are always included in the percent missing (which is entered at the upper right of the screen). When we are working with categorical data, by contrast, we need to consider several options. In particular, we need to be clear about the difference between Undecided and Missing. Suppose we expect that for every 100 people surveyed, we expect the following Case 1 One question we might ask is Of the people who responded, what proportion support Smith? In this case, the relevant proportion would be Smith 40 Jones 40 Undecided 15 No response (hang up the phone) 5
In this case, the relevant sample includes everyone who was approached for the survey. Therefore, both No response and Undecided should be included as valid categories, and percent missing is zero. Case 4 In some cases, we might be more interested in the Undecided than in Smith, since we want to know what proportion of the votes are in play. If the question is Of those who responded, what proportion is Undecided? the relevant proportion would be