Association. Suppose you were to collect data for each pair of variables. You want to make a scatterplot. Which variable would you use as the explanatory vari- able and which as the response variable? Why? What would you expect to see in the scatterplot? Discuss the likely direction, form, and strength. a) Apples: weight in grams, weight in ounces b) Apples: circumference (inches), weight (ounces) c) College freshmen: shoe size, grade point average d) Gasoline: number of miles you drove since filling up, gallons remaining in your tank
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Textbook Solutions for Stats: Modeling The World
Question
Sample survey. A polling organization is checking itsdatabase to see if the two data sources it used sampledthe same zip codes. The variable if thedata source is MetroMedia, 2 if the data source isDataQwest, and 3 if its RollingPoll. The organizationfinds that the correlation between five-digit zip code andDatasource is . It concludes that the correlation islow enough to state that there is no dependency betweenZip Code and Source of Data. Comment.
Solution
The first step in solving 7 problem number 30 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: Sample survey. A polling organization is checking itsdatabase to see if the two data sources it used sampledthe same zip codes. The variable if thedata source is MetroMedia, 2 if the data source isDataQwest, and 3 if its RollingPoll. The organizationfinds that the correlation between five-digit zip code andDatasource is . It concludes that the correlation islow enough to state that there is no dependency betweenZip Code and Source of Data. Comment.
From the textbook chapter Scatterplots, Association, and Correlation you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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