Dogs and calories In July 2007, Consumer Reports examined the calorie content of two kinds of hot dogs: meat (usually a mixture of pork, turkey, and chicken) and all beef. The researchers purchased samples of several different brands. The meat hot dogs averaged 111.7 calories, compared to 135.4 for the beef hot dogs. A test of the null hypothesis that theres no difference in mean calorie content yields a P-value of 0.124. Would a 95% confidence interval for mMeat - mBeef include 0? Explain.
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Textbook Solutions for Stats Modeling the World
Question
The Internet The NAEP report described in Exercise 39 compared science scores for students who had home Internet access to the scores of those who did not, as shown in the graph. They report that the differences are statistically significant. a) Explain what statistically significant means in this context. b) If their conclusion is incorrect, which type of error did the researchers commit? c) Does this prove that using the Internet at home can improve a students performance in science?
Solution
The first step in solving 23 problem number 40 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: The Internet The NAEP report described in Exercise 39 compared science scores for students who had home Internet access to the scores of those who did not, as shown in the graph. They report that the differences are statistically significant. a) Explain what statistically significant means in this context. b) If their conclusion is incorrect, which type of error did the researchers commit? c) Does this prove that using the Internet at home can improve a students performance in science?
From the textbook chapter Comparing Means you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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