front 1 Researchers are studying the relationship between honesty, age, and self-control conducted an experiment on 160 children between the ages of 5 and 15. The researchers asked each child to toss a fair coin in private and to record the outcome (heads or tails) on a paper sheet, and said they would only reward children who report heads. Half the students were explicitly told not to cheat and the others were not given any explicit instructions. Differences were observed in the cheating rates in the instruction and no instruction groups, as well as some differences across children's characteristics within each group. a) Identify the population of interest in the study. b) Identify the sample for this study. c) Can the results of the study be generalized to the population? Should the findings of the study be used to establish causal relationships. | back 1
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front 2 A restaurant owner is interested in the proportion of his customers who order dessert. He looks at 65 randomly selected receipts. Match the vocabulary word with its corresponding example.
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front 3 A state university is interested in where its students come from. They survey 300 of its students to find out if they are in-state, out-of-state, or foreign students. Match the vocabulary word with its corresponding example.
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front 4 A web administrator is interested in the average number of visitors per day that her website receives. Match the vocabulary word with its corresponding example.
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front 5 Political pollsters may be interested in the proportion of people that will vote for a particular cause. Match the vocabulary word with its corresponding example.
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front 6 Number of tickets sold to a concert | back 6 Quantitative - Discrete |
front 7 In a study, the data you collect is student id numbers. What type of data is this? | back 7 Qualitative (Categorical) |
front 8 Identify the type of data that would be used to describe a response. Students' GPAs | back 8 Quantitative - Continuous |
front 9 Identify the type of data that would be used to describe a response. Number of Students Enrolled at Skyline College | back 9 Quantitative - Discrete |
front 10 Is this value from a discrete or continuous data set. The number of children a person has | back 10 Quantitative - Discrete |
front 11 In a study, the data you collect is number of traffic tickets. This data is: | back 11 Quantitative - Discrete |
front 12 Identify the type of data that would be used to describe a response. Number of pets that are owned | back 12 Quantitative - Discrete |
front 13 In a study, the sample is chosen by choosing every 3rd person on a
row | back 13 Systematic |
front 14 A researcher wants to survey 2000 Americans for an obesity study. Match the strategies to their corresponding sampling techniques.
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front 15 A smart phone manufacturer wants to determine the average battery time that its new smart phone will get. The manufacturer will test 100 smart phones. Match the strategies to their corresponding sampling techniques.
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front 17 As part of a statistics project, Charlie would like to collect data on household size in his city. To do so, he asks each person in his statistics class for the size of their household and reports the results of a simple random sample. However, this is not a simple random sample. Why? | back 17
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front 18 In a study, the data you collect is Weight in pounds. | back 18 ratio |
front 19 In a study, the data you collect is Gender. | back 19 Nominal |
front 20 300 female Osprey hatch-lings were tracked until they died or succeeded in laying their own eggs. Based on the data, the researchers concluded that somewhere between 12% and 18% of all female Osprey hatch-lings in the US succeed in growing up to lay their own eggs. | back 20 Inferential Statistics |
front 21 Determine if the following is an example of descriptive or inferential statistics.
A hospital administrator wants to see if fewer mistakes are
made if nurses are forced to take frequent breaks. After observing a
sample of 300 nurses who were not forced to take frequent breaks and
400 who were forced to take frequent breaks, it was clear from the
data that implementing a policy to force nurses to take frequent
breaks will decrease the average number of mistakes. | back 21 Inferential Statistics |
front 22
85 randomly selected fifty-year-old Americans were asked how
much money they had saved for their retirement. The average for
these respondents was $25,000, the minimum was $0 and the maximum
was $1,200,000. | back 22 descriptive statistics |
front 23 Determine whether the following is an example of a sampling error or a non sampling error. A researcher studied brother-sister pairs to see if there is a difference in IQ scores. Although the researcher made no mistakes in collecting the data, the findings showed that there was a difference when in reality there is no difference in IQ based on gender. | back 23 sampling error |
front 24 Determine whether the following is an example of a sampling error or a non sampling error. A sociologist surveyed 300 people about their level of anxiety on a scale of 1 to 100. Unfortunately, the person inputting the data into the computer accidentally transposed six of the numbers causing the statistics to have errors. | back 24 non sampling error |
front 25 12% of all people are left handed. A researcher randomly selected 200 people and found that 16% of them were left handed. No mistakes were made in the data collection or data recording. The 4% difference is due to ... | back 25 sampling error |
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