Concept explainers
Putting It Together: Naughty or Nice? Yale University graduate student J. Kiley Hamlin conducted an experiment in which 16 ten-month-old babies were asked to watch a climber character attempt to ascend a hill. On two occasions, the baby witnesses the character fail to make the climb. On the third attempt, the baby witnesses either a helper toy push the character up the hill or a hinderer toy prevent the character from making the ascent. The helper and hinderer toys were shown to each baby in a random fashion for a fixed amount of time. The baby was then placed in front of each toy and allowed to choose which toy he or she wished to play with. In 14 of the 16 cases, the baby chose the helper toy.
Source: J Kiley Hamlin et al., “Social Evaluation by Preverbal Infants.” Nature, Nov. 2007.
- a. Why is it important to randomly expose the baby to the helper or hinderer toy first?
- b. What would be the appropriate null and alternative hypotheses if the researcher is attempting to show that babies prefer helpers over hinderers?
- c. Use the binomial
probability formula to determine the P-value for this test. - d. In testing 12 six-month-old babies, all 12 preferred the helper toy. The P-value was reported as 0.0002. Interpret this result.
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Fundamentals of Statistics (5th Edition)
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