The General Social Survey asked a random sample of adults their opinion about whether astrology is very scientific, sort of scientific, or not at all scientific. Here is a two-way table of counts for people in the sample who had three levels of higher education:

(a) Make a bar graph that compares opinions about astrology for the three education categories. Describe what you see.

(b) Minitab output for a chi-square test using these data is shown below. Carry out the test. What conclusion do you draw?

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) The higher the degree of the subjects, the more likely that they think that astrology is not at all scientific.

(b) There is sufficient evidence that there is an association between the variables.

Step by step solution

01

Part (a) Step 1: Given information

The given data is

02

Part (a) Step 2: Explanation

The proportions in each group is the number of subjects divided by the column total:

Create a histogram

The width of each bar is equal and the height is equal to the proportion.

03

Part (b) Step 1: Given information

The given data is

04

Part (b) Step 2: Explanation

The null hypothesis states that there is no association between the variables:

H0: There is no association between the variables

The alternative hypothesis states that there is an association between the variables:

Ha: There is an association between the variables

By using the test of chi-squater, we obtained that:

x2=10.582

Let's find the degree of freedom:

=(31)(21)=2×1=2

The P-value is given in the output as:

P=0.005

If the P-value is smaller than the significance level, reject the null hypothesis:

P<0.05RejectH0

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Many popular businesses are franchises—think of McDonald’s. The owner of local franchise benefits from brand recognition, national advertising, and detailed guidelines provided by the franchise chain. In return, he or she pays fees to the franchise firm and agrees to follow its policies. The relationship between the local owner and the franchise firm is spelled out in a detailed contract.

One clause that the contract may or may not contain is the entrepreneur’s right to an exclusive territory. This means that the new outlet will be the only representative of the franchise in a specified territory and will not have to compete with other outlets of the same chain. How does the presence of an exclusive-territory clause in the contract relate to the survival of the business?

A study designed to address this question collected data from a random sample of 170new franchise firms. Two categorical variables were measured for each franchisor. First, the franchisor was classified as successful or not based on whether or not it was still offering franchises as of a certain date. Second, the contract each franchisor offered to franchisees was classified according to whether or not there was an exclusive-territory clause. Here are the count data, arranged in a two-way table:

role="math" localid="1650453920307" Exclusive TerritorySuccessYesNoTotalYes10815123No341347Total14228170

Do these data provide convincing evidence of an association between an exclusive territory clause and business survival? Carry out an appropriate test at the α=0.01level.

Mars, Inc., reports that their M&M’S Peanut Chocolate Candies are produced according to the following color distribution: 23% each of blue and orange, 15% each of green and yellow, and 12% each of red and brown. Joey bought a bag of Peanut Chocolate Candies and counted the colors of the candies in his sample: 12 blue, 7 orange, 13 green, 4 yellow, 8 red, and 2 brown.

Calculate the expected count for each color, assuming that the company’s claim is true. Show your work.

Calculate the expected count for each color, assuming that the company’s claim is true. Show your work.

Perform a follow-up analysis of the test in Exercise 40 by finding the individual components of the chi-square statistic. Which cell(s) contributed most to the final result?

A company claims that each batch of its deluxe mixed nuts contains 52%cashews, 27%almonds, 13%macadamia nuts, and 8%brazil nuts. To test this claim, a quality control inspector takes a random sample of 150nuts from the latest batch. The one-way table below displays the sample data.

(a) State appropriate hypotheses for performing a test of the company’s claim.

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