Practice of Statistics in the Life Sciences
Practice of Statistics in the Life Sciences
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781319013370
Author: Brigitte Baldi, David S. Moore
Publisher: W. H. Freeman
Question
Book Icon
Chapter 27, Problem 27.1AYK

(a)

To determine

To find the median minutes spent standing or walking for each group and which group appears more active.

(a)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 27.1AYK

  421.444 is the median minutes spent standing or walking for each group and lean subjects appears more active.

Explanation of Solution

In the question, it is given the table for the subjects spent standing or walking over a ten-day period. It concerned a study comparing the level of physical activity of lean and mildly obese people who do not exercise. The data are a bit irregular but not distinctly non-Normal. Let us use the Wilcoxon test for comparison with the two-sample t test. Now, to find the median minutes spent standing or walking for each group, let us arrange the whole data in ascending order and the bold ones are lean subjects. Then the data will be as:

    260.244
    267.344
    319.212
    347.375
    358.65
    367.138
    374.831
    410.631
    413.667
    416.531
    426.356
    464.756
    504.7
    511.1
    543.388
    555.656
    578.869
    584.644
    607.925
    677.188

Now, the median is calculated as:

  =416.531+426.3562=421.444

And as we can see that the last part of the data contains the lean subjects more so their physical activities are more than the obese subjects. Thus, lean subjects are more active.

(b)

To determine

To arrange all twenty observations in order and find the ranks.

(b)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

In the question, it is given the table for the subjects spent standing or walking over a ten-day period. It concerned a study comparing the level of physical activity of lean and mildly obese people who do not exercise. The data are a bit irregular but not distinctly non-Normal. Let us use the Wilcoxon test for comparison with the two-sample t test. Now let us arrange all data in order and gave rank by using excel by clicking on the sort icon in the home tab. The data with the ranks will be as:

    RankSubjects
    1260.244
    2267.344
    3319.212
    4347.375
    5358.65
    6367.138
    7374.831
    8410.631
    9413.667
    10416.531
    11426.356
    12464.756
    13504.7
    14511.1
    15543.388
    16555.656
    17578.869
    18584.644
    19607.925
    20677.188

(c)

To determine

To find out what is the value of W and if null hypothesis is true what are the mean and standard deviation of W .

(c)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 27.1AYK

The value W is 142 and mean and standard deviation are 105 and 13.229 .

Explanation of Solution

In the question, it is given the table for the subjects spent standing or walking over a ten-day period. It concerned a study comparing the level of physical activity of lean and mildly obese people who do not exercise. The data are a bit irregular but not distinctly non-Normal. Let us use the Wilcoxon test for comparison with the two-sample t test.The ranks are given in part (b), so let us sum the ranks for the subjects. Then we have,

    SubjectsSum
    Lean subjects142
    Obese subjects68

Now, the value Wis 142 . The hypotheses will be defined as:

Null hypothesis: There is no difference in the distribution of subjects.

Alternative hypothesis: Lean subjects are higher than the obese subjects.

And the mean and standard deviation is calculated as:

  μW=n1(N+1)2=10(20+1)2=105σW=n1n2(N+1)12=10×10(20+1)12=13.229

Now let us calculate the P-value as:

  P(W142)=P(Z14210513.229)=P(Z2.80)=10.99744=0.00256

As we know that if the P-value is less than or equal to the significance level then the null hypothesis is rejected, so we have,

  P<0.05Reject H0

Thus, we have sufficient evidence to prove that the lean subjects spent more minutes standing or walking than the obese subjects.

(d)

To determine

To explain does comparing W with the mean and standard deviation suggest that the lean subjects are more active than the obese subjects.

(d)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 27.1AYK

No, comparing W with the mean and standard deviation does not suggest that the lean subjects are more active than the obese subjects.

Explanation of Solution

In the question, it is given the table for the subjects spent standing or walking over a ten-day period. It concerned a study comparing the level of physical activity of lean and mildly obese people who do not exercise. The data are a bit irregular but not distinctly non-Normal. Let us use the Wilcoxon test for comparison with the two-sample t test. The ranks are given in part (b), so let us sum the ranks for the subjects. Then we have,

    SubjectsSum
    Lean subjects142
    Obese subjects68

And the mean and standard deviation is calculated as:

  μW=n1(N+1)2=10(20+1)2=105σW=n1n2(N+1)12=10×10(20+1)12=13.229

Thus, comparing W with the mean and standard deviation does not suggest that the lean subjects are more active than the obese subjects because there is less difference between the value of W from the mean of W . so, we do not have a strong evidence from this that the lean subjects are more active than the obese subjects.

Want to see more full solutions like this?

Subscribe now to access step-by-step solutions to millions of textbook problems written by subject matter experts!
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
Statistics
ISBN:9781119256830
Author:Amos Gilat
Publisher:John Wiley & Sons Inc
Text book image
Probability and Statistics for Engineering and th...
Statistics
ISBN:9781305251809
Author:Jay L. Devore
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Statistics for The Behavioral Sciences (MindTap C...
Statistics
ISBN:9781305504912
Author:Frederick J Gravetter, Larry B. Wallnau
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th E...
Statistics
ISBN:9780134683416
Author:Ron Larson, Betsy Farber
Publisher:PEARSON
Text book image
The Basic Practice of Statistics
Statistics
ISBN:9781319042578
Author:David S. Moore, William I. Notz, Michael A. Fligner
Publisher:W. H. Freeman
Text book image
Introduction to the Practice of Statistics
Statistics
ISBN:9781319013387
Author:David S. Moore, George P. McCabe, Bruce A. Craig
Publisher:W. H. Freeman