I would greatly appreciate an easy-to-understand answer. To my understanding, if the adjusted residual is +/- 1.96 or more (or less if negative), then something is going on. What exactly does the adjusted residual tell me, and if possible please explain with an example. I am using SPSS.
According to the explanation in SPSS (from https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/interpreting-adjusted-residuals-crosstabs-cell-statistics), they state the following: "As noted by Agresti, the standardized residuals (called Pearson residuals in Agresti) that are also provided as cell statistics in Crosstabs, are also asymptotically normally distributed with a mean of 0 under the null hypothesis of independence."
But what exactly does it mean that something is going on if the adjusted residuals are greater than 1.96 or less than -1.96?