1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
Exercise: Testing the interaction in two-by-two ANOVA
Anchoring and adjustment
Items and anchor values (Jacowitz and Kahneman 1995)
- How tall is the largest coast redwood in the world? [20, 168m]
- How many member states belong to the United Nations? [14, 127 members]
- How much km/h is the maximum speed of a house cat? [11, 48km/h]
Research question
- Does time pressure (respond within 7s) increase the anchor effect?
Suggest a minimum relevant effect
- Go to https://apps.mathpsy.uni-tuebingen.de/fw/pars2eta/
- Fix the parameters of the ANOVA model
Some background
- Open anchoring quest (Röseler et al. 2022), https://osf.io/ygnvb/
Plan the study
- Pick one of the three items
- Parameter recovery
- Make a data frame for the two-by-two design
- With the parameter values determined before, simulate responses
- Re-estimate the parameters
- Power simulation
- Calculate the sample size necessary to detect the time-pressure effect
Bonus task: Verify the plausibility of your model
- Download the raw data from the open anchoring quest project
- Estimate
\sigmaand compare it to your value
References
Jacowitz, K. E., and D. Kahneman. 1995. “Measures of Anchoring in Estimation Tasks.” Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 21 (11): 1161–66. https://doi.org/10.1177/01461672952111004.
Röseler, L., L. Weber, K. A. C. Helgerth, E. Stich, M. Günther, P. Tegethoff, F. S. Wagner, et al. 2022. “OpAQ: Open Anchoring Quest, Version 1.1.50.97.” https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/YGNVB.