

| Variable | Description |
| Condition | this represents the content of the description that the students were given about the professor (1 = charismatic, 2 = punitive) |
| Rating | how favorably the subjects rated the professor after hearing the lecture (higher ratings are more favorable) |
References
Kelley, H. H.(1950). The warm-cold variable in first impression of persons. Journal of Personality, 18, 431-439.
Towler, A., & Dipboye, R. L. (1998). The effect of instructor reputation and need for cognition on student behavior (poster presented at American Psychological Society conference, May 1998).
Links
Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance by Louisa Coburn
Exercises
1. What is the independent variable in this study?
2. Plot stem and leaf displays of the ratings for each condition.
3. What is the standard deviation of the ratings in the charismatic-reputation condition? What is the standard deviation of the ratings in the punitive-reputation condition?
4. Plot side-by-side box plots for the ratings by condition.
5. In which of the two conditions are there outliers?
6. Conduct an independent-samples t-test to examine the difference between the mean ratings of the charismatic-reputation condition and the punitive-reputation condition. Is the difference in mean ratings statistically significant? What can you conclude?
7. Compute a confidence interval on the difference between the means of the two conditions.