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In my Masters thesis I conducted an experiment in that subjects should decide between two alternatives. I had a control and a treatment group. The hypothesis was that in the treatment group more subjects decide for alternative B than in the control group.

I've got the following results:

Control group: - Alternative A: 15 - Alternative B: 16

Treatment group: - Alternative A: 17 - Alternative B: 6

I am using Pearson's Chi-Square Test to test if the difference is significant. I do that using SPSS, therefore I only get the "2-sided significance". The test says the p-value is 0,059.

My question is if it is correct to divide the p-value by 2 in order the get the p-value for the 1-sided significance test. As far as I understood the concept this would be correct as my hypothesis is formulated only in one direction.

Thanks a lot.

Oh, and another short question. I am not an English native speaker but I have to write my thesis in english, so I have a short question regarding language: Is it correct to write: "the p-level is below the 5%-quantile so the finding is significant"?

Thanks!

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  • $\begingroup$ This is an odd feature of SPSS: it always performs two-sided tests, without possibility to change this. If you need the test to be one-sided, you have to recalculate the obtained p-value yourself. $\endgroup$ Sep 4, 2015 at 10:47

3 Answers 3

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There is a reason why the 'two-tailed chi-squared' is seldomly used: if you do a $\chi^2$ test for contingency tables, then the test statistic is (without the continuity correction):

$X^2 = \sum_{i,j}\frac{(o_{ij}-e_{ij})^2}{e_{ij}}$

where $o_{ij}$ are the observed counts in cell $i,j$ and $e_{ij}$ are the expected cell count in cell $i,j$. Under relatively weak assumptions it can be shown that $X^2$ approximately follows a $\chi^2$ distribution with $1$ degree of freedom (this is for a 2x2 table as in your case).

If you assume independence between the row and column variable, (which is $H_0$ ) , then the $e_{ij}$ are estimated from the marginal probabilities.

This is just for a short intro to $\chi^2$ for contingency tables. The most important thing is that the numerator of each term in $X^2$ is the squared difference between the 'observed counts' and the 'expected counts'. So whether $o_{ij} < e_{ij}$ or $o_{ij} > e_{ij}$ makes no difference in the result for $X^2$.

So the $\chi^2$ test for contingency table tests whether the observations are either smaller or larger than expected ! So it is a two-sided test even if the critical region is defined in one (the right) tail of the $\chi^2$ distribution.

So the point is that the $\chi^2$-test is a two-sided test (it can reject values $o_{ij}$ that are either too small or too large) but it uses a one-sided critial region (the right queue of $\chi^2$).

So how do you have to interpret your result: if $H_0: \text{ 'row variable and column variable are independent' }$ then the probability of observing a value at least as extreme as the computed $X^2$ is 0.059. This is called the p-value of the test.

(Note that, by the above 'independent' includes 'either too high or too low'. )

In order to 'decide' something, you have to first chose a significance level. This is a 'risk that you accept for making type I errors'. The significance level of $5\%$ is commonly used.

You will now reject the null hypothesis when the p-value (0.059) is smaller than the choosen significance level (0.05). This is not so for your table, so you will not reject $H_0$ at a significance level of $5\%$.

As far as your question at the bottom is concerned you should say (but in your example it is not the case) : the p-value is lower than or equal to the choosen significance level of 0.05, so the $H_0$ is rejeceted and we conclude that the rows and column variables are dependent. (but, as said, in your example the p-value is higher than the 0.05 significance level).

Maybe you should also take a look at Misunderstanding a P-value?.

EDIT: to react to questions/remarks in the comments I added this:

@StijnDeVuyst:

An 'extreme' case may make this clear. Assume the we know that the population is normal with an unknown $\mu$ but $\sigma=1$, i.e. $N(\mu,1)$.

We want to test the hypothesis $H_0: \mu = 0$ versus $\mu \ne 0$. If we observe a value $x=2$ from a sample then the p-value of this observation is $0.2275$ (1-pnorm(q=2)) multiplied by two because our critical region is two-tailed.

We would also define the critical region in another way: if $H_0$ is true then the population has a standard normal distribution, so the test statistic $X$ is $X \sim N(0;1)$. Then by definition of a $\chi^2$ with one degree of freedom, we also know that $X^2 \sim \chi^2_{(1)}$.

We had observed $x=2$ thus $x^2=4$ and if we compute the p-value of 4 for a $\chi^2_{(1)}$ we find 1-pchisq(q=4,df=1)=0.0455.

Note that this is exactly equal to (2*(1-pnorm(q=2)).

So we do the same test $H_0: \mu = 0$ versus $\mu \ne 0$ (different or not, so two-sided) with two (equivalent) critical regions one that is one-tailed (the one based on the $\chi^2$ distribution) and another one that is two-tailed (the one based on the normal distribution).

@StepMuc:

I will not try to be precise here, the goal is to give you the 'feeling' of what it is about, because you asked for it in the comment.

For the 'idea behind' hypothesis testing I refer to What follows if we fail to reject the null hypothesis?.

So, in hypothesis testing, if you want to 'find evidence' for something, then you assume the opposite. You want to show that the group you belong to (treatment/control) 'influences' your choice for 'A' of 'B', so you want to show that 'group' (treatment/control) and choice (A/B) are 'dependent'. If you want to show that, then you assume the opposite, so

$H_0: \text{ group and choice are independent }$

and the alternative is then

$H_1: \text{ group and choice are dependent }$.

The next thing you, as a scientist, have to decide is the 'significance level $\alpha$'. This is the probability that the test rejects $H_0$ while in reality it is true. When we reject $H_0$ we conclude (see the What follows if we fail to reject the null hypothesis?) that we found statistical evidence for $H_1$, and we have probability of $\alpha$ that we found 'false evidence'. It is up to you (or your risk appetite) how high you choose this $\alpha$. Common values are 0.001, 0.01, 0.05, 0.1. The higher $\alpha$ the higher the risk that you discover 'false evidence', false evidence for $H_1$ is called a type I error.

The $\chi^2$ test for contingence tables tests the $H_0: \text{ group and choice are independent }$ versus $H_1: \text{ group and choice are dependent }$.

If $H_0$ is true, then it can be shown that the $X^2$ defined supra is comes from a $\chi^2$ distribution. From the table that you have, you can compute $X^2$, this gives you a number.

You have 54 people, 31 in treatment group, 23 in control group. Assume now that you let these people randomly choose A/B en you make e.g. 1000000 tables with these random outcomes and for each of these tables you compute $X^2$ as above, then the probability that the computed $X^2$ is larger or equal than the one for your table is 0.059 (which is the p-value in your question).

So what we have now is that we assumed that $H_0$ is true and if that is the case then we find that the probability to have the value of higher is 0.059. If this a 'low enough' probability that means that we found that 'if $H_0$ is true, then we find a value that is very improbable' so $H_0$ must be false and $H_1$ is 'statistically proven'.

We still have to define what is meant by 'low enough' and that is defined as 'lower than or equal to the choosen significance level $\alpha$.

So if you choose a significance level $\alpha=0.05$ then, as the probability of having the value for $X^2$ or higher was 0.059, you will not reject $H_0$ at the $5\%$ significance level, so you find no evidence for $H_1$ at the $5\%$ significance level. So you have to accept $H_0$ that group and choice are independent.

If you are ready to accept more type I errors and set $\alpha=0.1$ then, as your p-value is lower than 0.1, you will reject $H_0$ and conclude that 'group and choice' are dependent at the $10\%$ significance level.

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  • $\begingroup$ I don't quite agree with this. In the case of a contingency table, the sum of all observed counts ($o_{ij}$) should be the same as the sum of all expected counts ($e_{ij}$). So 'too small' in one cell means 'too large' in other cells. There is no too small or too large, only 'different' or 'not different'. As you say, the critical region is in the right tail of the $\chi^2$-distribution and that makes it essentially a one-sided test in my opinion. $\endgroup$ Sep 4, 2015 at 11:11
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    $\begingroup$ @StijnDeVuyst: and if you do a two-sided t-test, then you test $H_0: \mu= 0$ versus $H_1: \mu \ne 0$. So also 'different' or 'not different' , why is this a two-sided test then ? I think you have to distinguish between a 'two-sided test' and a 'two-sided critical region'. So you can have a two-sided test with a one-sided critical region. The $\chi^2$ test for contigency tables is a two-sided test with a one-sided critial region (because of squaring) and the t-test above is a two-sided test with a two-sided critical region. $\endgroup$
    – user83346
    Sep 4, 2015 at 11:12
  • $\begingroup$ I see what you mean. This is perhaps just a dispute over terminology: for me 'two-sided' is indeed the same as 'two-sided critical region', because I only look at what region of the test statistic distribution supports the alternative hypothesis. In that regard, the t-test you mention is two-sided, the chi-square is one-sided. $\endgroup$ Sep 4, 2015 at 11:26
  • $\begingroup$ @StijnDeVuyst: I added an example at the bottom of my answer. $\endgroup$
    – user83346
    Sep 4, 2015 at 11:50
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    $\begingroup$ (+1) The two-tailed test has a use in assessing whether results are "too good to be true". Fisher used it on Mendel's pea data - see e.g. Pires & Branco (2010), "A Statistical Model to Explain the Mendel–Fisher Controversy", Statist Sci., 25, 4. [I should've said "the one-tailed test on the other tail"] $\endgroup$ Sep 4, 2015 at 13:26
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You are correct that the one-tailed p-value is for any hypothesis that is formulated as one-sided and that two-tailed p-values are for two-sided hypotheses, in which either group (in this case) can prove to be "better" than the other.

Since you're talking about treatments, I assume that your field is in medicine, psychology or something similar. It is very rare for hypotheses in these fields to be one-sided (to my experience at least), and if you want to test the effect of a treatment, you must have very convincing arguments for why the treatment effect under no circumstances could be negative.

So in practice, one-tailed p-values are rarely used (I can't recall ever having seen them used in a paper) and I think you should use the two-tailed test as well.

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  • $\begingroup$ Hi Jonas, I agree that two-sided tests are often applied, but a two-sided $\chi^2$-test is not so frequent and the reason for that I have tried to explain in my answer. $\endgroup$
    – user83346
    Sep 10, 2015 at 8:05
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As far as I can see, the twosidedness is not referring to the chisquare test at all, but rather to the corresponding two-sided test of two proportions. The chisquare part is indeed a onetailed test, which it should be. The same kind of vocabulary is used in i e openepi.com. Some more details were covered in another comment, see https://stats.stackexchange.com/a/157005/18276.

If I am correct, then the entire discussion of when a twosided chisquare test should be used is more or less off topic. Or at least the answer to a question that was not raised, but to another question.

It's really odd that SPSS does not have a clear formulation of tests of proportions since that is such a common task. Even if a chisquare test in a 2x2 table is equivalent to a test of proportions, it would be easier to understand the output if it had been based on proportions rather than a substitute. It is also strange that they haven't included tests which are less sensitive to small samples (the Agresti-Coull or mid-P tests for example).

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