MyLab Statistics with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Statistical Reasoning for Everyday Life (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134678528
Author: Jeff Bennett, William L. Briggs, Mario F. Triola
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 1, Problem 10CQ
In Exercises 6–10, consider a clinical trial designed to determine whether daily doses of 81-mg aspirin tablets have any effect on pulse rates. One group of subjects is given daily doses of 81-mg aspirin tablets and a second group is given daily doses of placebo tablets.
- 10. If all subjects in the aspirin treatment group are athletes and all subjects in the control group are not athletes, then there is a danger of which of the following: (a) samples that are too small; (b) confounding; (c) blinding.
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A U.S. Food Survey showed that Americans routinely eat beef in their diet. Suppose that in a study of 49 consumers in Illinois and 64 consumers in Texas the following results were obtained from two samples regarding average yearly beef consumption:
Illinois Texas
= 49 = 64
= 54.1lb = 60.4lb
S1 = 7.0 S2 = 8.0
Formulate a hypothesis so that, if the null hypothesis is rejected, we can conclude that the average amount of beef eaten annually by consumers in Illinois is significantly less than that eaten by consumers in Texas.
In the book Business Research Methods (5th ed.), Donald R. Cooper and C. William Emory discuss studying the relationship between on-the-job accidents and smoking. Cooper and Emory describe the study as follows:
Suppose a manager implementing a smoke-free workplace policy is interested in whether smoking affects worker accidents. Since the company has complete reports of on-the-job accidents, she draws a sample of names of workers who were involved in accidents during the last year. A similar sample from among workers who had no reported accidents in the last year is drawn. She interviews members of both groups to determine if they are smokers or not.
The sample results are given in the following table.
On-the-Job Accident
Smoker
Yes
No
Row Total
Heavy
12
5
17
Moderate
9
10
19
Nonsmoker
13
17
30
Column total
34
32
66
Expected counts are below observed counts
Accident
No Accident
Total
Heavy
12
5
17
8.76
8.24…
6.
In the book Business Research Methods (5th ed.), Donald R. Cooper and C. William Emory discuss studying the relationship between on-the-job accidents and smoking. Cooper and Emory describe the study as follows:
Suppose a manager implementing a smoke-free workplace policy is interested in whether smoking affects worker accidents. Since the company has complete reports of on-the-job accidents, she draws a sample of names of workers who were involved in accidents during the last year. A similar sample from among workers who had no reported accidents in the last year is drawn. She interviews members of both groups to determine if they are smokers or not.
The sample results are given in the following table.
Chapter 1 Solutions
MyLab Statistics with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Statistical Reasoning for Everyday Life (5th Edition)
Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 1ECh. 1.1 - Basic Definitions. Define the terms population,...Ch. 1.1 - Confidence Interval. What is a margin of error,...Ch. 1.1 - Statistical Process. Describe the five basic steps...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...Ch. 1.1 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 510, determine...
Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 11ECh. 1.1 - Population, Sample, Statistic, and Parameter....Ch. 1.1 - Population, Sample, Statistic, and Parameter....Ch. 1.1 - Population, Sample, Statistic, and Parameter....Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Identifying the Confidence Interval. In Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Forming Conclusions. For each of Exercises 2124,...Ch. 1.1 - Forming Conclusions. For each of Exercises 2124,...Ch. 1.1 - Forming Conclusions. For each of Exercises 2124,...Ch. 1.1 - Forming Conclusions. For each of Exercises 2124,...Ch. 1.1 - Interpreting Real Studies. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Interpreting Real Studies. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Interpreting Real Studies. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Interpreting Real Studies. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.1 - Five Steps in a Study. Describe how you would...Ch. 1.1 - Five Steps in a Study. Describe how you would...Ch. 1.1 - Five Steps in a Study. Describe how you would...Ch. 1.1 - Five Steps in a Study. Describe how you would...Ch. 1.2 - Census and Sample. What is a census, what is a...Ch. 1.2 - Representative Sample. What is a representative...Ch. 1.2 - Biased Sample. What is a biased sample, and what...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. List and define five common...Ch. 1.2 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.2 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.2 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.2 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.2 - Census. In Exercises 912, determine whether a...Ch. 1.2 - Census. In Exercises 912, determine whether a...Ch. 1.2 - Census. In Exercises 912, determine whether a...Ch. 1.2 - Census. In Exercises 912, determine whether a...Ch. 1.2 - Representative Samples? In Exercises 1316,...Ch. 1.2 - Representative Samples? In Exercises 1316,...Ch. 1.2 - Representative Samples? In Exercises 1316,...Ch. 1.2 - Representative Samples? In Exercises 1316,...Ch. 1.2 - Evaluate the Sample Choices. Exercises 17 and 18...Ch. 1.2 - Evaluate the Sample Choices. Exercises 17 and 18...Ch. 1.2 - Bias. In Exercises 1922, determine whether there...Ch. 1.2 - Bias. In Exercises 1922, determine whether there...Ch. 1.2 - Bias. In Exercises 1922, determine whether there...Ch. 1.2 - Bias. In Exercises 1922, determine whether there...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Sampling Methods. In Exercises 2338, identify...Ch. 1.2 - Choosing Sampling Methods. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 40ECh. 1.2 - Prob. 41ECh. 1.2 - Choosing Sampling Methods. For each of Exercises...Ch. 1.3 - Variables. Define variable, variables, of...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. In testing the effectiveness of a new...Ch. 1.3 - Placebo. What is a placebo, and why is it...Ch. 1.3 - Blinding. What is blinding, and why is it...Ch. 1.3 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Type of Study. For Exercises 920, determine...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Confounding. For each of the studies described in...Ch. 1.3 - Analyzing Experiments. Exercises 2932 present...Ch. 1.3 - Analyzing Experiments. Exercises 2932 present...Ch. 1.3 - Analyzing Experiments. Exercises 2932 present...Ch. 1.3 - Analyzing Experiments. Exercises 2932 present...Ch. 1.4 - Critical Evaluation. Briefly describe the eight...Ch. 1.4 - Peer Review. What is peer review? How is it...Ch. 1.4 - Selection Bias and Participation Bias. Describe...Ch. 1.4 - Self-Selected Surveys. Why are self-selected...Ch. 1.4 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Does It Make Sense? For Exercises 58, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Applying Guidelines. In Exercises 916, determine...Ch. 1.4 - Bias. In each of Exercises 1720, identify and...Ch. 1.4 - Bias. In each of Exercises 1720, identify and...Ch. 1.4 - Bias. In each of Exercises 1720, identify and...Ch. 1.4 - Bias. In each of Exercises 1720, identify and...Ch. 1.4 - Its All in the Wording. Princeton Survey Research...Ch. 1.4 - Tax or Spend? A Gallup poll asked the following...Ch. 1.4 - Accurate Headlines? Exercises 23 and 24 give a...Ch. 1.4 - Accurate Headlines? Exercises 23 and 24 give a...Ch. 1.4 - Stat Bites. Politicians commonly believe that they...Ch. 1.4 - Stat Bites. Politicians commonly believe that they...Ch. 1.4 - Stat Bites. Politicians commonly believe that they...Ch. 1.4 - Stat Bites. Politicians commonly believe that they...Ch. 1 - Medication Usage In a survey of 3005 adults aged...Ch. 1 - Simple Random Sample. An important element of this...Ch. 1 - Echinacea Treatment. Rhinoviruses typically cause...Ch. 1 - Wording of a Survey Question. In The...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 15, assume that you conduct a survey...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 15, assume that you conduct a survey...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 15, assume that you conduct a survey...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 15, assume that you conduct a survey...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 15, assume that you conduct a survey...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 610, consider a clinical trial...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 610, consider a clinical trial...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 610, consider a clinical trial...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 610, consider a clinical trial...Ch. 1 - In Exercises 610, consider a clinical trial...Ch. 1 - In a Marist Poll, respondents chose the most...Ch. 1 - From the poll results given in Exercise 11, can we...Ch. 1 - Consider a study in which you measure the weights...Ch. 1 - Consider a survey of randomly selected people in...Ch. 1 - If a statistical study is carefully conducted in...Ch. 1 - Public Health Is Your Lifestyle Healthy? Consider...Ch. 1 - Prob. 2.3FCh. 1 - Prob. 2.5F
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