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2. an athletic trainer at the university of missouri hypothesizes that …

Question

  1. an athletic trainer at the university of missouri hypothesizes that football players drink more water than soccer players during the season, so he sends out a survey to test his hypothesis. the athletes were asked to record how many ounces of water they consumed over the course of one full day. the data for the athletes is below:
average ounces of h₂o consumed ± 2seₓ
50 athletes surveyed in soccer64 ± 10

a. state a null hypothesis for this experiment.

b. use the space provided to make a bar graph comparing the sample means given in the table above. make sure to plot the 95% ci (+/- 2sem), using the values provided.

university of missouri athlete
consumption of water study

graph grid with x - axis: football, soccer; y - axis: mean ounces of h₂o consumed

c. what conclusion can be drawn from this data? circle the correct options below to complete the conclusion:

  • there is / is not sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis. the athletic trainer’s alternative hypothesis is / is not supported by the data. while the mean ounces of water consumed by football players is higher than the mean ounces of water consumed by soccer players, the error bars overlap / do not overlap indicating that the difference between the means is / is not significant.
  1. you are comparing three data sets, each with the same standard deviation of 2.3. the only difference between the data sets is the sample size (n). data set 1 has a sample size of 15, data set 2 has a sample size of 30, and data set 3 has a sample size of 45. calculate the standard error for each data set.

a. data set 1: ____________

b. data set 2: ____________

c. data set 3: ____________

  1. referring to question 3, what happened to the standard error when the sample size (n) was increased? use the formula to justify why this happened.

Explanation:

Response
Question 2a
Brief Explanations

The null hypothesis assumes no difference between the groups. Here, it's that football and soccer players drink the same amount of water.

Brief Explanations
  1. Axes Setup: The x - axis has two categories: Football and Soccer. The y - axis is labeled "Mean Ounces of \(H_2O\) Consumed".
  2. Bar Heights: For Football, the mean is 70, so the bar height is 70. For Soccer, the mean is 64, so the bar height is 64.
  3. Error Bars:
  • For Football, the error is \(\pm13\). So the lower bound is \(70 - 13=57\) and the upper bound is \(70 + 13 = 83\).
  • For Soccer, the error is \(\pm10\). So the lower bound is \(64 - 10 = 54\) and the upper bound is \(64+10 = 74\).
  • Draw vertical error bars on each bar from the lower bound to the upper bound.

(Note: Since this is a text - based response, we can't draw the actual graph, but this is the process to create it.)

Question 2c
Brief Explanations
  1. Error Bar Overlap: The confidence interval for Football is \(57 - 83\) and for Soccer is \(54 - 74\). These intervals overlap.
  2. Null Hypothesis and Alternative Hypothesis: When error bars overlap, we do not have sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis, and the alternative hypothesis (that football players drink more) is not supported. The difference between the means is not significant because of the overlapping error bars.

Answer:

The null hypothesis (\(H_0\)) is: There is no difference in the average ounces of water consumed between football players and soccer players (i.e., the average ounces of water consumed by football players is equal to the average ounces of water consumed by soccer players).

Question 2b