Instructions for Data Analysis Project
You've learned lots about doing statistical analyses. It's time to work without a net....
Project Proposal due date: TBA.
Completed project due date: TBApresented at
poster sessions in lab sections.
General Description
For the data analysis project, you address some questions that interest you with the statistical methodology we learn in Statistics 103. You choose the question; you decide how to collect data; you do the analyses. The questions can address almost any topic (although I have veto power), including topics in economics, psychology, sociology, natural science, medicine, public policy, sports, law, etc.
The project requires you to synthesize all the material from the course. Hence, it's one of the best ways to solidify your understanding of statistical methods. Plus, you get answers to issues that pique your intellectual curiosity.
You should work in groups of two to three people on the project. Larger or smaller groups must be granted special permission from the instructor. You can work with people in different lab sections than yours.
Your project will be presented in a poster session during the last week of lab sections. In a poster session, each groufinap makes visual materials that explain the project. Then, people wander around looking at the posters and talking to the presenters, thereby learning about the various projects. Poster sessions are extremely common at professional conferences in many disciplines, including statistics. In our poster session, some members of each group are stationed at the poster to answer questions, while the others wander around to examine the projects. The poster-sitters and wanderers switch off after the wanderers have examined all the posters.
There is no formal write-up of your project, i.e., no term paper is
written. Each person must present or be part of a
presentation of their group's project. The poster is handed in and
graded. Your presentations factor in to the grade. You also
will anonymously evaluate each other's contributions to the overall
project.
You should get started on the project as early as possible,
particularly in thinking about procuring data and collecting
background information. Keep in mind that by the end of lectures, you
will have learned many statistical techniques, such as hypothesis
testing, confidence intervals, and regression. These techniques will
help you address your question of interest.
Some ideas for projects
The most important aspects of any statistical analysis are stating
questions and collecting data. Hence, to get the full experience
of running your own study, the project requires you to analyze data
that you collect. It is not permissible to use data sets that
have been put together by others. You are permitted to collect
data off of the web; however, you must be the one who decides on the
analyses and puts the data set together.
Good projects begin with very clear and well-defined hypotheses.
You should think of questions that interest you first, then worry
about how to collect and analyze data to address those questions.
Generally, vague topics lead to uninteresting projects.
For example, surveying Duke undergraduates to see which sex
studies more doesn't yield a whole lot of interesting conclusions.
On the other hand, it would be interesting to hypothesize why
men or women study more, and then figure out how to collect and analyze
data to test your hypotheses.
Below is a list of some successful project topics that have been done by past statistics students. This isn't a list that you have to pick from; in fact, you'll get a higher grade if you come up with something else. Instead, consider the list a tool for generating ideas.
1. Are men more likely than women to help someone who has
dropped his or her books? Does the sex of the book dropper matter?
2. Does having the pictures on puzzle pieces shorten the time to
complete the puzzle relative to not having the pictures?
3. Does eating popcorn affect people's enjoyment of movies?
4. Does drinking caffeine affect students' performance on tests?
5. Does wearing shoes affect the height of a vertical jump?
6. Does the quality of Duke students' relationship with their
freshman roommate affect the quality of their overall experience at
Duke?
7. Does the Chronicle fairly represent all students' voices
at Duke?
8. Does birth order affect academic success at Duke?
9. Do actors' races affect which television programs Duke
students are willing to watch?
10. What is more important to Duke students when choosing a
major: interest in the subject, career aspirations, family influence,
or ability in the subject?
11. Do FOCUS students at Duke eat, sleep, and go to parties with
different frequencies than non-FOCUS students?
12. Are people like the descriptions of their horoscope sign?
13. Are people rational when playing prisoner's dilemma games?
14. Is team payroll related to winning percentages in
professional sports?
15. Can we predict the order of the NFL draft based on
characteristics of the players?
16. Do the results of federal elections have an effect on stock
prices?
17. Is there a correlation between female empowerment and AIDS
prevalence in nations across the world?
18. Do certain subpopulations get mammograms more frequently than
others?
19. Are members of certain subpopulations (e.g., racial, ethnic,
or educational backgrounds) more likely to receive the death penalty?
20. Are policies that reduce governmental debt also associated
with reduction in quality of life?
It is important to be thoughtful about, and provide an adequate description of, the methods and design of the study. Report on the possible biases associated with your data collection. You also need to be realistic in planning your research design: can you carry out what you have planned within a reasonable time period and investment of your own energy? The quality of the final product is what counts, not just the amount of perspiration that went into it! Finally, you should make use of the concepts and methods learned in this course, and not just general knowledge, in planning and completing this type of project.
Practical Advice: It is often easier to collect accurate experimental data than accurate survey data. Nonresponse tends to be less of an issue with projects based on experiments than with those based on surveys. I strongly encourage you to consider experiments as opposed to surveys. For those who want to do surveys, consider using students in dorms or certain courses as target populations. Make every effort to get a random sample, and try to keep track of the characteristics of nonrespondents. You will have nonresponse; your project won't be penalized for nonresponse as long as you document it and hypothesize how it might affect your results.
Project proposal
Your group should HAND IN ONE PROJECT PROPOSAL (with all group members' names and section leaders on it) by the proposal due date given above. The proposal is a page or so describing what you plan to do. Be as specific as possible, describing what question you want to investigate and generally how you plan to obtain data. The instructor and TAs will return the proposals to you with comments. The more detailed your proposal, the better feedback you get! Your proposal should address the following questions:
Project grading guidelines
You will be graded by your TAs or instructor. Graders will be looking for the following characteristics:
Guidelines for making an effective poster
An effective poster communicates your project in a clear and concise fashion. The poster should address the following six points:
Procedures for when group members are not contributing their fair share
Each group should spread the work among members so that everyone shares in the project. If some group members do not contribute their assigned workload, or are unwilling to take on work, your group may petition to have such group members dropped from the group. The process of this petition proceeds as follows:
1) Send an e-mail to the instructor explaining how the group members have not contributed adequately. ALL MEMBERS OF THE GROUP MUST BE SENT THIS E-MAIL. This is to ensure that everything is done openly.
2) The instructor will arrange a meeting with the group. Subjects of a petition who fail to attend the arranged meeting will be dropped from the group.
3) At this meeting, the instructor will make a decision on the petition.
These petitions can be made until April 1. After
this date, groups will not be split up. Students who have
been dropped from groups must find another group or get special
permission to work alone from the instructor. After one of these
meetings, any group member who does not contribute after promising to
do so will be dropped from the group.