Contributed paper list


   (Tuesday 13th, 08:20-09:20)

Identifying misconceptions about confidence intervals


Presenter

Pawel Kalinowski (Australia)

Abstract

Although confidence intervals (CIs) have many benefits over null hypothesis significance testing (NHST) they can still be misinterpreted. Identifying CI misconceptions is a first step in designing teaching tools that can be used to prevent or reduce them. I surveyed graduate level students and found they hold several misconceptions about CIs. Many believe there is a uniform likelihood distribution across a CI, with a high proportion of these showing a cliff effect (a sudden major drop in likelihood at each limit of a CI). Many students also misunderstand the relationship between the width of a CI and the confidence level. In this paper I present a taxonomy of CI misconceptions identified by empirical studies, and explore faulty conceptual models that may be the source of the misconceptions. I also propose an educational tool that could be used to confront CI misconceptions, particularly misconceptions about CI distributions.