One-Sample T Test

This feature requires the Statistics Base option.

The One-Sample T Test procedure tests whether the mean of a single variable differs from a specified constant and automates the t-test effect size computation.

Examples
A researcher might want to test whether the average IQ score for a group of students differs from 100. Or a cereal manufacturer can take a sample of boxes from the production line and check whether the mean weight of the samples differs from 1.3 pounds at the 95% confidence level.
Statistics
For each test variable: mean, standard deviation, standard error of the mean, and the estimation of the effect size for the t-test. The average difference between each data value and the hypothesized test value, a t test that tests that this difference is 0, and a confidence interval for this difference (you can specify the confidence level).

Data Considerations

Data
To test the values of a quantitative variable against a hypothesized test value, choose a quantitative variable and enter a hypothesized test value.
Assumptions
This test assumes that the data are normally distributed; however, this test is fairly robust to departures from normality.

Obtaining a One-Sample T Test

This feature requires the Statistics Base option.

  1. From the menus choose:

    Analyze > Compare Means > One-Sample T Test...

  2. Select one or more variables to be tested against the same hypothesized value.
  3. Enter a numeric test value against which each sample mean is compared.
  4. Optionally, you can:
    • Select Estimate effect sizes to control the estimation of the t-test effect size.
    • Click Options to control the treatment of missing data and the level of the confidence interval.

This procedure pastes T-TEST command syntax.