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t-tests, ANOVAs & Regression and their application to the statistical analysis of neuroimaging

t-tests, ANOVAs & Regression and their application to the statistical analysis of neuroimaging. Carles Falcon & Suz Prejawa. OVERVIEW. Basics, populations and samples T-tests ANOVA Beware! Summary Part 1 Part 2. Hypotheses H 0 = Null-hypothesis

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t-tests, ANOVAs & Regression and their application to the statistical analysis of neuroimaging

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  1. t-tests, ANOVAs & Regressionand their application to the statistical analysis of neuroimaging Carles Falcon & Suz Prejawa

  2. OVERVIEW • Basics, populations and samples • T-tests • ANOVA • Beware! • Summary Part 1 • Part 2

  3. Hypotheses H0 = Null-hypothesis H1 = experimental/ research hypothesis Descriptive vs inferential statistics (Gaussian) distributions p-value & alpha-level (probability and significance) Basics Activation in the left occipitotemporal regions , esp the visual word form area, is greatest for written words.

  4. Populations and samples Population  z-tests and distributions • Sample • (of a population) • t-tests and distributions NOTE: a sample can be 2 sets of scores, eg fMRI data from 2 conditions

  5. Comparison between Samples Are these groups different?

  6. Comparison between Conditions (fMRI) Reading aloud (script) vs “Reading” finger spelling (sign) Reading aloud vs Picture naming

  7. comp infer 12 10 95% CI 8 6 Left hemisphere right hemisphere lesion site t-tests Exp. 1 Exp. 2 • Compare the mean between 2 samples/ conditions • if 2 samples are taken from the same population, then they should have fairly similar means  if 2 means are statistically different, then the samples are likely to be drawn from 2 different populations, ie they really are different

  8. t-test in VWFA • Exp. 1: activation patterns are similar, not significantly different  they are similar tasks and recruit the VWFA in a similar way • Exp. 2: activation patterns are very (and significantly) different reading aloud recruits the VWFA a lot more than naming Exp. 1 Exp. 2

  9. Formula Difference between the means divided by the pooled standard error of the mean Reporting convention: t= 11.456, df= 9, p< 0.001

  10. Cond. 1 Cond. 2 Formula cont.

  11. Types of t-tests * 2 experimental conditions and different participants were assigned to each condition ** 2 experimental conditions and the same participants took part in both conditions of the experiments

  12. 2-tailed tests vs one-tailed tests 2 sample t-tests vs 1 sample t-tests Types of t-tests cont. 2.5% 2.5% Mean Mean A known value Mean 5%

  13. Comparison of more than 2 samples Tell me the difference between these groups… Thank God I have ANOVA

  14. ANOVA in VWFA (2x2) • Is activation in VWFA for different for a) naming and reading and b) influenced by age and if so (a + b) how so? • H1 & H0 • H2 & H0 • H3 & H0 •  reading causes significantly stronger activation in the VWFA but only in the older group so the VWFA is more strongly activated during reading but this seems to be affected by age (related to reading skill?) Naming Reading

  15. ANOVA • ANalysis Of VAriance (ANOVA) • Still compares the differences in means between groups but it uses the variance of data to “decide” if means are different • Terminology (factors and levels) • F- statistic • Magnitude of the difference between the different conditions • p-value associated with F isprobability that differences between groups could occur by chance if null-hypothesis is correct • need for post-hoc testing (ANOVA can tell you if there is an effect but not where) Reporting convention: F= 65.58, df= 4,45, p< .001

  16. Types of ANOVAs both Between-subject design Within-subject design NOTE: You may have more than 2 levels in each condition/ task

  17. BEWARE! • Errors • Type I: false positives • Type II: false negatives • Multiple comparison problem  esp prominent in fMRI

  18. SUMMARY • t-tests compare means between 2 samples and identify if they are significantly/ statistically different • may compare two samples to each other OR one sample to a predefined value • ANOVAs compare more than two samples, over various conditions (2x2, 2x3 or more) • They investigate variances to establish if means are significantly different • Common statistical problems (errors, multiple comparison problem)

  19. PART 2 Correlation - How much linear is the relationship of two variables? (descriptive) Regression - How good is a linear model to explain my data? (inferential)

  20. Y X • Correlation: • How much depend the value of one variable on the value of the other one? Y Y X X no correlation poor negative correlation high positive correlation

  21. How to describe correlation (1): • Covariance • The covariance is a statistic representing the degree to which 2 variables vary together • (note that Sx2 = cov(x,x) )

  22. cov(x,y) = mean of products of each point desviation from mean values Geometrical interpretation: mean of ‘signed’ areas from rectangles defined by points and the mean value lines

  23. Y X sign of covariance = sign of correlation Y Y X X Positive correlation: cov > 0 Negative correlation: cov < 0 No correlation. cov ≈ 0

  24. How to describe correlation (2): • Pearson correlation coefficient (r) • r is a kind of ‘normalised’ (dimensionless) covariance • r takes values fom -1 (perfect negative correlation) to 1 (perfect positive correlation). r=0 means no correlation (S = st dev of sample)

  25. Pearson correlation coefficient (r) • Problems: • It is sensitive to outlayers • r is an estimate from the sample, but does it represent the population parameter?

  26. Linear regression: • - Regression: Prediction of one variable from knowledge of one or more other variables • How good is a linear model (y=ax+b) to explain the relationship of two variables? • If there is such a relationship, we can ‘predict’ the value y for a given x. But, which error could we be doing? (25, 7.498)

  27. Preliminars: Lineal dependence between 2 variables Two variables are linearly dependent when the increase of one variable is proportional to the increase of the other one y x Samples: - Energy needed to boil water - Money needed to buy coffeepots

  28. The equation y= mx+n that connects both variables has two parameters: • ‘m’ is the unitary increase/decerease of y (how much increases or decreases y when x increases one unity) • ‘n’ the value of y when x is zero (usually zero) m n 1 0 Samples: ‘m’= Energy needed to boil one liter of water , ‘n’=0 ‘m’ = prize of one coffeepot, ‘n’= fixed tax/comission to add

  29. εi = ŷi, predicted = yi , observed εi = residual Fiting data to a straight line (o viceversa): • Here, ŷ = ax + b • ŷ : predicted value of y • a: slope of regression line • b: intercept ŷ = ax + b • Residual error (εi): Difference between obtained and predicted values of y (i.e. yi- ŷi) • Best fit line (values of b and a) is the one that minimises the sum of squared errors (SSerror) (yi- ŷi)2

  30. Adjusting the straight line to data: • Minimise (yi- ŷi)2 , which is (yi-axi+b)2 • Minimum SSerror is at the bottom of the curve where the gradient is zero – and this can found with calculus • Take partial derivatives of (yi-axi-b)2 respect parametres a and b and solve for 0 as simultaneous equations, giving: • This calculus can allways be done, whatever is the data!!

  31. How good is the model? • We can calculate the regression line for any data, but how well does it fit the data? • Total variance = predicted variance + error variance: Sy2 = Sŷ2 + Ser2 • Also, it can be shown that r2 is the proportion of the variance in y that is explained by our regression model • r2 = Sŷ2 / Sy2 • Insert r2Sy2 into Sy2 = Sŷ2 + Ser2 and rearrange to get: • Ser2 = Sy2 (1 – r2) • From this we can see that the greater the correlation the smaller the error variance, so the better our prediction

  32. sŷ2 r2 (n - 2)2 F = (dfŷ,dfer) ser2 1 – r2 Is the model significant? • i.e. do we get a significantly better prediction of y from our regression equation than by just predicting the mean? • F-statistic: • And it follows that: complicated rearranging =......= So all we need to know are r and n!!! r(n - 2) t(n-2) = √1 – r2

  33. Generalization to multiple variables • Multiple regression is used to determine the effect of a number of independent variables, x1, x2, x3 etc., on a single dependent variable, y • The different x variables are combined in a linear way and each has its own regression coefficient: • y = b0 + b1x1+ b2x2 +…..+ bnxn + ε • The a parameters reflect the independent contribution of each independent variable, x , to the value of the dependent variable, y • i.e. the amount of variance in y that is accounted for by each x variable after all the other x variables have been accounted for

  34. Geometric view, 2 variables: ‘Plane’ of regression: Plane nearest all the sample points distributed over a 3D space: y = b0 + b1x1+b2x2 + ε y ε x2 x1 ŷ = b0 + b1x1+ b2x2

  35. Multiple regression in SPM: y : voxel value x1, x2,… : parameters that are supposed to justify y variation (regressors) GLM: given a set of values yi, (voxel value at a determinated position for a sample of images) and a set of explanatories variables xi (group, factors, age, TIV, … for VBM or condition, movement parameters,…. for fMRI) find the (hiper)plane nearest all the points. The coeficients defining the plane are named b1, b2,…, bn equation: y = b0 + b1x1+ b2x2 +…..+ bnxn + ε

  36. Matrix representation and results:

  37. Last remarks: • Correlated doesn’t mean related. • e.g, any two variables increasing or decreasing over time would show a nice correlation: C02 air concentration in Antartica and lodging rental cost in London. Beware in longitudinal studies!!! • Relationship between two variables doesn’t mean causality • (e.g leaves on the forest floor and hours of sun) • Cov(x,y)=0 doesn’t mean x,y being independents • (yes for linear relationship but it could be quadratic,…)

  38. Questions ? Please don’t! 

  39. REFERENCES • Field, A. (2005). Discovering Statistics Using SPSS (3rd ed). London: Sage Publications Ltd. • Field, A. (2009). Discovering Statistics Using SPSS (2nd ed). London: Sage Publications Ltd. • Various stats websites (google yourself happy) • Old MfD slides, esp 2008

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