What is a p value and what does it mean? (2024)

What is a p value and what does it mean? (1)

  • Subscribe
  • Log In More

    Log in via Institution

    Log in via OpenAthens

    Log in using your username and password

  • Basket
  • Search More

    Advanced search

  • Latest content
  • Current issue
  • Archive
  • Write for Us
  • About
  • EBN Blog

  • CloseMore

    Main menu

    • Latest content
    • Current issue
    • Archive
    • Write for Us
    • About
    • EBN Blog
  • Subscribe
  • Log in More

    Log in via Institution

    Log in via OpenAthens

    Log in using your username and password

  • BMJ Journals

You are here

  • Home
  • Archive
  • Volume 15,Issue 2
  • What is a p value and what does it mean?

Email alerts

Article Text

Article menu

  • Article Text
  • Article info
  • Citation Tools
  • Share
  • Rapid Responses
  • Article metrics
  • Alerts

PDF

Research made simple

What is a p value and what does it mean?

Free

  1. Dorothy Anne Forbes
  1. Correspondence to Dorothy Anne Forbes
    Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Level 3, Edmonton Clinic Health Academy, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 1C9, Canada; dorothy.forbes{at}ualberta.ca

Statistics from Altmetric.com

    Request Permissions

    If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

    Researchers aim to make the strongest possible conclusions from limited amounts of data. To do this, they need to overcome two problems. First, important differences in the findings can be obscured by natural variability and experimental imprecision. Thus, it is difficult to distinguish real differences from random variability. Second, researchers' natural inclination is to conclude that differences are real, and to minimise the contribution of random variability. Statistical probability minimises this from happening.1

    Statistical probability or p values reveal whether the findings in a research study are statistically significant, meaning that the findings are unlikely to have occurred by chance. To understand the p value concept, it is important to understand its relationship with the α level. Before conducting a study, researchers specify the α level which is most often set at 0.05 (5%). This conventional level was based on the writings of Sir Ronald Fisher, an influential statistician, who in 1926 reported that he preferred the 0.05 cut-off for separating the probable from the improbable.2 Researchers who set α at 0.05 are willing to accept that there is a 5% chance that their findings are wrong. However, researchers may adopt probability cut-offs that are more generous (eg, an α set at 0.10 means there is a 10% chance that the conclusions are wrong) or more stringent (eg, an α set at 0.01 means there is a 1% chance that the conclusions are wrong). The design of the study, purpose or intuition may influence the researcher's setting of the α level.2

    To illustrate how setting the α level may affect the conclusions of a study, let us examine a research study that compared the annual incomes of hospital based nurses and community based nurses. The mean annual income for hospital based nurses was reported to be $70 000 and for community based nurses to be $60 000. The p value of this study was 0.08. If the researchers set the α level at 0.05, they would conclude that there was no significant difference between the annual incomes of hospital and community-based nurses, since the p value of 0.08 exceeded the α level of 0.05. However, if the α level had been set at 0.10, the p value of 0.08 would be less than the α level and the researchers would conclude that there was a significant difference between the annual incomes of hospital and community based nurses. Two very different conclusions.3

    It is easy to read far too much into the word significant because the statistical use of the word has a meaning entirely distinct from its usual meaning. Just because a difference is statistically significant does not mean that it is important or interesting. In the example above, at the 0.10 α level, although the findings are statistically significant, results due to chance occur 1 out of 10 times. Thus, chance of conclusion error is higher than when the α level is set at 0.05 and results due to chance occur 5 out of 100 times or 1 in 20 times. In the end, the reader must decide if the researchers selected the appropriate α level and whether the conclusions are meaningful or not.

    References

    1. Graphpad. What is a p value? 2011. http://www.graphpad.com/articles/pvalue.htm (accessed 10 Dec 2011).

      1. Duffy ME,
      2. Munroe BH,
      3. Jacobsen BS

      . Key principles of statistical inference. In: Maher BH, ed. Statistical Methods for Health Care Research. Fifth edition. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2005:73105.

      1. El-Masri MM

      . The significance of p values. Can Nurse 2011;107:8.

      OpenUrlPubMed

    Footnotes

    • Competing interests None.

    Read the full text or download the PDF:

    Subscribe

    Log in via Institution

    Log in via OpenAthens

    Log in using your username and password

    What is a p value and what does it mean? (2024)

    FAQs

    What does p-value tell you? ›

    The p value, or probability value, tells you how likely it is that your data could have occurred under the null hypothesis. It does this by calculating the likelihood of your test statistic, which is the number calculated by a statistical test using your data.

    What does AP value mean simple terms? ›

    A p-value measures the probability of obtaining the observed results, assuming that the null hypothesis is true. The lower the p-value, the greater the statistical significance of the observed difference.

    What does a P value of 0.9 mean? ›

    Mayo_Kupo. • 2y ago. A p-value of 0.9 means that the data are very well within expectations for the null hypothesis. It is just what you would expect if the null were true.

    Is AP value over 0.05 significant? ›

    If the p-value is less than 0.05, it is judged as “significant,” and if the p-value is greater than 0.05, it is judged as “not significant.” However, since the significance probability is a value set by the researcher according to the circumstances of each study, it does not necessarily have to be 0.05.

    What happens if p-value is high? ›

    If the p-value is 0.05 or lower, the result is trumpeted as significant, but if it is higher than 0.05, the result is non-significant and tends to be passed over in silence.

    How to interpret t value and p-value? ›

    A big t, with a small p-value, means that the null hypothesis is discredited, and we would assert that the means are significantly different in the way specified by the null hypothesis (and a small t, with a big p-value means they are not significantly different in the way specified by the null hypothesis).

    Is 0.2 a good p-value? ›

    If the p-value comes in at 0.2 the result is not statistically significant, but since the boost is so large you'll likely still proceed, though perhaps with a bit more caution.

    Is the p-value of 0.1 good? ›

    Interpreting the p-value

    Commonly adopted guidelines suggest p < 0.001 as very strong evidence, p < 0.01 as strong evidence, p < 0.05 as moderate evidence, p < 0.1 as weak evidence or a trend, and p ≥ 0.1 as insufficient evidence.

    What happens if p-value is 0? ›

    Anyway, if your software displays a p values of 0, it means the null hypothesis is rejected and your test is statistically significant (for example the differences between your groups are significant).

    How do you explain p-value to non-technicians? ›

    Academically, the P-value is the probability of obtaining results as extreme as the observed data, assuming that the null hypothesis is correct1.

    When to reject AP value? ›

    A P-value less than 0.05 is deemed to be statistically significant, meaning the null hypothesis should be rejected in such a case. A P-Value greater than 0.05 is not considered to be statistically significant, meaning the null hypothesis should not be rejected.

    How to report p-value example? ›

    The preferred method of reporting P-values is to use an exact number, with two or three significant decimal places rather than as a range or category (e.g., NS, p > . 05, or p < . 05).

    References

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Recommended Articles
    Article information

    Author: Nathanial Hackett

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5329

    Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

    Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Nathanial Hackett

    Birthday: 1997-10-09

    Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

    Phone: +9752624861224

    Job: Forward Technology Assistant

    Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

    Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.