Cocaine addicts need cocaine to feel any pleasure, so perhaps giving them an antidepressant drug will help. A 3-year study with 72chronic cocaine users compared an antidepressant drug called desipramine with lithium (a standard drug to treat cocaine addiction) and a placebo. One-third of the subjects were randomly assigned to receive each treatment. At the end of the study, researchers recorded whether or not the subjects relapsed. Which of the following conditions must be satisfied to perform the appropriate chi-square test using the data from this study?

I. The population distribution is approximately Normal.

II. The treatments were randomly assigned.

III. The observed counts are all at least 5.

a. I only

b. II only

c. III only

d. II and III

e. I, II, and III

Short Answer

Expert verified

Option(b) is correct because only condition II. must be satisfied.

Step by step solution

01

Step  1 : Given information

We have to select which option is correct.

02

Simplification

Thechisquaretesthasthreeconditions:randomness,independence,andlargecounts.
The volunteers will be randomly assigned to a survey, satisfying the random sample criterion.
The sample size should be smaller than 10%of the total population in order to satisfy the requirement of independence. Because each survey's projected count is at least 5, the criterion of a large count will be met.

In given options, only II must be satisfied. Hence, b is correct.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Tuition bills A random sample of U.S. adults was recently asked, “Would you support or oppose major new spending by the federal government that would help undergraduates pay tuition at public colleges without needing loans?” The two-way table shows the responses, grouped by age.

Do these data provide convincing evidence of an association between age and opinion about loan-free tuition in the population of U.S. adults?

“Will changing the rating scale on a survey affect how people answer the question?” To find out, the group took an SRS of 50students from an alphabetical roster of the school’s just over 1000students. The first 22students chosen were asked to rate the cafeteria food on a scale of 1(terrible) to 5(excellent). The remaining 28students were asked to rate the cafeteria food on a scale of 0(terrible) to 4(excellent). Here are the data:

a. Was this an observational study or an experiment? Justify your answer.

b. Explain why it would not be appropriate to perform a chi-square test in this setting.

More candy The two-way table shows the results of the experiment

described in Exercise 27.


Red SurveyBlue Survey
Control Survey
Total
Red Candy13
5
8
26
Blue Candy
7
15
12
34
Total20
20
20
60

a. State the appropriate null and alternative hypotheses.

b. Show the calculation for the expected count in the Red/Red cell. Then provide a

complete table of expected counts.

c. Calculate the value of the chi-square test statistic.

Which test? Determine which chi-square test is appropriate in each of the following settings. Explain your reasoning.

a. With many babies being delivered by planned cesarean section, Mrs. McDonald’s statistics class hypothesized that there would be fewer younger people born on the weekend. To investigate, they selected a random sample of people born before1980 and a separate random sample of people born after1993. In addition to year of birth, they also recorded the day of the week on which each person was born.

b. Are younger people more likely to be vegan/vegetarian? To investigate, the Pew Research Center asked a random sample of 1480 U.S. adults for their age and whether or not they are vegan/vegetarian.

Testing a genetic model Biologists wish to cross pairs of tobacco plants having genetic makeup Gg, indicating that each plant has one dominant gene (G) and one recessive gene (g) for color. Each offspring plant will receive one gene for color from each parent. The Punnett square shows the possible combinations of genes received by the offspring.

The Punnett square suggests that the expected ratio of green (GG) to yellow-green (Gg) to albino (gg) tobacco plants should be 1:2:1. In other words, the biologists predict that 25%of the offspring will be green, 50%will be yellow-green, and 25%will be albino. To test their hypothesis about the distribution of offspring, the biologists mate 84randomly selected pairs of yellow-green parent plants. Of 84offspring, 23plants were green, 50were yellow-green, and 11 were albino. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the α=0.01 level that the true distribution of offspring is different from what the biologists predict?

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