--%>

STATISTICS Question

This week you will analyze if women drink more sodas than men.  For the purposes of this Question, assume that in the past there has been no difference.  However, you have seen lots of women drinking sodas the past few months.  You will perform a hypothesis test to determine if women now drink more sodas than men.  State what you are testing.  Write the hypotheses.  Show the relevant numbers.  Then explain your results.  Use alpha = .05. Use the attached data from the previous week.

   Related Questions in Basic Statistics

  • Q : Explain Queuing theory Queuing theory :

    Queuing theory: • Queuing theory deals with the analysis of lines where customers wait to receive a service:

    Q : What is your conclusion The following

    The following data were collected on the number of emergency ambulance calls for an urban county and a rural county in Florida. Is County type independent of the day of the week in receiving the emergency ambulance calls? Use α = 0.005. What is your conclusion? Day of the Week<

  • Q : What is Inter-arrival times

    Inter-arrival times:A) Requests arrive randomly, often separated by small time intervals with few long separations among themB) The time until the next arrival is independent of when the last arrival occurredC) Coro

  • Q : Use the NW corner rule to find an

      (a) Use the NW corner rule to find an initial BFS, then solve using the transportation simplex method. Indicate your optimal objective function value. (b) Suppose we increase s1 from 15 to 16, and d3 from 10 to 11. S

  • Q : FIN512 Entrepreneurial Finance Chapter

      Chapter 6: Discussion Question: #4 p. 223  It is usually easier to forecast sales for a seasoned firm contrast to an early-stage venture because an early-stage venture has limited access to bank credit lines, sho

  • Q : Cumulative Frequency and Relative

    Explain differences between Cumulative Frequency and Relative Frequency?

  • Q : Define Service Demand Law

    Service Demand Law:• Dk = SKVK, Average time spent by a typical request obtaining service from resource k• DK = (ρk/X

  • Q : Decision Variables Determine Decision

    Determine Decision Variables: Let X1 be the number of private homes to be inspectedLet X2 be the number of office buildings to be inspect

  • Q : MANOVA and Reflection Activity

    Activity 10:   MANOVA and Reflection   4Comparison of Multiple Outcome Variables This activity introduces you to a very common technique - MANOVA. MANOVA is simply an extension of an ANOV

  • Q : Problem on Model Checking Part (a).

    Part (a). Draw a state diagram for a car with the following state variables: D indicating whether the car is in drive; B indicating the brake pedal is depressed; G indicating the gas pedal is depressed; and M indicating whether the car is moving. (For example, the sta