help
help > RE: second-level analysis in Conn
Sep 4, 2015 06:09 PM | Diana Parvinchi - McMaster University
RE: second-level analysis in Conn
Hi Alfonso,
Many thanks for your reply - very helpful! I have attached several graphs and would love to hear your interpretation of these results. We are starting to understand how to read these graphs. I also have two questions. 1) how can we determine where an effect is coming from? For example, the last three regressors are the scores of the three groups on a specific measure. We can read the direction of association between symptoms severity and connectivity via these three regressor. Based on your previous response, the bars with the error bars not crossing the y=0 axis are the significant associations. Using this observation, If we observe one significant effect, among the three, and would like to report this finding in a manuscript for publication purposes, where should we look for the statistical info (e.g. p-values)? 2) Also, how can we modify these graphs (e.g. the x-axis labels)?
Best,
Diana.
Many thanks for your reply - very helpful! I have attached several graphs and would love to hear your interpretation of these results. We are starting to understand how to read these graphs. I also have two questions. 1) how can we determine where an effect is coming from? For example, the last three regressors are the scores of the three groups on a specific measure. We can read the direction of association between symptoms severity and connectivity via these three regressor. Based on your previous response, the bars with the error bars not crossing the y=0 axis are the significant associations. Using this observation, If we observe one significant effect, among the three, and would like to report this finding in a manuscript for publication purposes, where should we look for the statistical info (e.g. p-values)? 2) Also, how can we modify these graphs (e.g. the x-axis labels)?
Best,
Diana.