124 PART 3 Getting Down and Dirty with Data
Table 9-3 shows that Drug A tended to lower blood pressure by about 18 mmHg.
For Drug A, mean SBP changed from 139 to 121 mmHg from before to after treat-
ment, whereas the Drug B group produced no noticeable change in blood pressure
because it stayed around 141 mmHg from pretreatment to post-treatment. All
that’s missing are some p values to indicate the significance of the changes over
time within each group and of the differences between the groups. We show you
how to calculate those in Chapter 11.
Graphing Numerical Data
Displaying information graphically is a central part of interpreting and commu-
nicating the results of scientific research. You can easily spot subtle features in a
graph of your data that you’d never notice in a table of numbers. Entire books have
been written about graphing numerical data, so we only give a brief summary of
some of the more important points here.
Showing the distribution with histograms
Histograms are bar charts that show what fraction of the participants have values
falling within specified intervals called classes. The main purpose of a histogram is
to show you how the values of a numerical value are distributed. This distribution
is an approximation of the true population frequency distribution for that vari-
able, as shown in Figure 9-5.
FIGURE 9-5:
Population
distribution of
systolic blood
pressure (SBP)
measurements in
mmHg (a) and
distribution of a
sample from that
population (b).
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