Olympic Medals Shown in the next column are the type and number of medals each country

Chapter 13, Problem 2

(choose chapter or problem)

Olympic Medals Shown in the next column are the type and number of medals each country won in the 2000 Summer Olympic Games. You are to rank the countries from highest to lowest. Gold medals are highest, followed by silver, followed by bronze. There are many different ways to rank objects and events. Here are several suggestions. a. Rank the countries according to the total medals won. b. List some advantages and disadvantages of this method. c. Rank each country separately for the number of gold medals won, then for the number of silver medals won, and then for the number of bronze medals won. Then rank the countries according to the sum of the ranks for the categories. d. Are the rankings of the countries the same as those in step a? Explain any differences. e. List some advantages and disadvantages of this method of ranking. f. A third way to rank the countries is to assign a weight to each medal. In this case, assign 3 points for each gold medal, 2 points for each silver medal, and 1 point for each bronze medal the country won. Multiply the number of medals by the weights for each medal and find the sum. For example, since Austria won 2 gold medals, 1 silver medal, and 0 bronze medals, its rank sum is (2 3) (1 2) (0 1) 8. Rank the countries according to this method. g. Compare the ranks using this method with those using the other two methods. Are the rankings the same or different? Explain. h. List some advantages and disadvantages of this method. i. Select two of the rankings, and run the Spearman rank correlation test to see if they differ significantly. Summer Olympic Games 2000 Final Medal Standings Country Gold Silver Bronze Austria 2 1 0 Canada 3 3 8 Germany 14 17 26 Italy 13 8 13 Norway 4 3 3 Russia 32 28 28 Switzerland 1 6 2 United States 40 24 33 S

Unfortunately, we don't have that question answered yet. But you can get it answered in just 5 hours by Logging in or Becoming a subscriber.

Becoming a subscriber
Or look for another answer

×

Login

Login or Sign up for access to all of our study tools and educational content!

Forgot password?
Register Now

×

Register

Sign up for access to all content on our site!

Or login if you already have an account

×

Reset password

If you have an active account we’ll send you an e-mail for password recovery

Or login if you have your password back