Statistics in a Modern World 800
Assignment 1
Homework Exercises Assigned from Part 1 (50 pts.) due Wed. Sept. 11
in Lecture
CHAPTER 1
#2. (2 pts.) "People who often attend cultural
activities, such as movies, sports events and concerts, are more likely
than their less cultured cousins to survive the next eight to nine
years, even when education and income are taken into account, according
to a survey by the University of Umea in Sweden" (American Health,
April 1997, p. 20).
- Can this claim be tested by conducting an
experiment? First answer yes or no, then explain
briefly.
- On the basis of the study that was conducted, can we conclude
that attending cultural events causes people to be likely to live
longer? First answer yes or no, then explain briefly.
#5. (2 pts.) "If you have borderline high blood pressure, taking
magnesium supplements may help, Japanese researchers report. Blood
pressure fell significantly in subjects who got 400-500 milligrams of
magnesium a day for four weeks, but not in those getting a placebo"
(USA Weekend, 22-24 May 1998, p.11).
- Do you think this was (i) a randomized experiment or (ii) an
observational study?
- Do you think the relationship found in this study is a causal
one, in which taking magnesium actually causes blood pressure to be
lowered? Answer yes or no.
#16. (1 pt.) Sometimes television news programs ask viewers to call
and register their opinions about an issue. One number is to be called
for a "yes" opinion and another number for a "no"
vote. Do you think viewers who call are a representative sample of all
viewers? First answer yes or no, then explain briefly.
#18(a). (1 pt.) Suppose a researcher would like to
determine whether one grade of gasoline produces better gas mileage than
another grade. Twenty cars are randomly divided into two groups, with
ten cars receiving one grade and ten receiving the other. After many
trips, average mileage is computed for each car. In which case would it
be easier to detect a difference in gas mileage between the two grades?
(i) 20 cars all the same size; or (ii) 20 cars covering a wide range of
sizes and weights. (Circle one.)
CHAPTER 2
#9. (3 pts.) Suppose a tobacco company is planning to fund a
telephone survey of attitudes about banning smoking in restaurants. In
each of the following phases of the survey, should the company disclose
who is funding the study? Answer yes or no after each:
- When respondents answer the phone, before they are interviewed.
- When the survey results are reported in the news.
- When the interviewers are trained and told how to conduct the
interviews.
#13. (3 pts.) Suppose a study were to find that drinking coffee
raised cholesterol levels. Further, suppose you drink two cups of
coffee a day and have a family history of heart problems related to high
cholesterol. Which three of the Seven Critical Components p.16 should
interest you most, in terms of deciding whether to change your
coffee-drinking habits? Circle three of these:
- Source of research and funding
- Researchers who had contact with participants
- Individuals studied and how they were selected
- Exact nature of measurements made or questions asked
- Setting in which measurements were taken
- Extraneous differences between groups being compared
- Magnitude of any claimed effects or differences.
CHAPTER 3
#8. (1 pt.) If we were interested in knowing whether the
average price of homes in a certain county had gone up or down this year
in comparison with last year, would we be more interested in having a
valid measure or a reliable measure?
#10 (2 pts.) To measure the amount of crime in a given city, do you
think the crime statistics reported by the police are
- a valid measure? (Answer yes or no.)
- a reliable measure? (Answer yes or no.)
#11. (2 pts.) Refer to Case Study 2.1, pp. 26-27, "Brooks Shoes
Brings Flawed Study to Court." Circle the two of the seven pitfalls
on p. 32 which apply most directly here:
1. Deliberate bias 2. Unintentional bias 3. Desire to please 4.
Asking the uninformed
5. Unnecessary complexity 6. Ordering of questions
7. Confidentiality and anonymity
#12 (3 pts.) An advertiser of a certain brand of aspirin (let’s
call it Brand B) claims that it is the preferred painkiller for
headaches, based on the results of a survey of headache sufferers. The
choices given to respondents were: Tylenol, Extra-Strength Tylenol,
Brand B Aspirin, Advil.
- Is this an open- or closed-form question?
- Name an additional choice which definitely should have been
included.
- Do the survey results provide good evidence for the
advertiser's claim? Answer yes or no.
#15 (1 pt.) In February 1998, U.S. president Bill Clinton was under
investigation for allegedly having had an extramarital affair. A Gallup
Poll asked the following two questions: "Do you think most
presidents have or have not had extramarital affairs while they were
president?" and then "Would you describe Bill Clinton’s
faults as worse than most other presidents, or as no worse than most
other presidents?" For the first question, 59% said "have
had," 33% said "have not," and the remaining 8% had no
opinion. For the second question, 24% said "worse," 75% said
"no worse," and only 1% had no opinion. If the first question
had NOT been asked before thesecond one, the percentage answering
"worse" to the second question would have been (a) lower (b)
same (c) higher
CHAPTER 4
#7 (6 pts.) For each of the following situations, CIRCLE the word
or words that tell you what constitutes the POPULATION; UNDERLINE the
word or words that tell what constitutes the SAMPLE. Then indicate what
type of sample was used.
- To survey the opinions of its customers, an airline company made
a list of all its flights and randomly selected 25 flights. All of the
passengers on those flights were asked to fill out a survey.
[Circle one:
- simple random sample
- stratified
- cluster
- systematic
- multistage
- volunteer
- convenience or haphazard
]
- A large variety store wanted to know if consumers would be
willing to pay slightly higher prices to have computers available
throughout the store to help them locate items. The store posted an
interviewer at the door and told her to collect a sample of 100 opinions
by asking the next person who came in the door each time she had
finished an interview. [Circle one: (i) simple random sample (ii)
stratified (iii) cluster (iv) systematic (v) multistage (vi) volunteer
(vii) convenience or haphazard]
#12 (1 pt.) Which is worse, a volunteer response or a volunteer sample?
#20 (1 pt.) Suppose that a gourmet food magazine wants to know how
its readers feel about serving beer with various types of food. The
magazine sends surveys to 1000 randomly selected readers. Which one of
the "difficulties and disasters" in sampling, p.58, is the
magazine most likely to face? (Circle it) 1. Using the wrong sampling
frame 2. Not reaching the individuals selected 3. Getting no response
or getting a volunteer response 4. Getting a volunteer sample 5. Using
a convenience or haphazard sample
CHAPTER 5
#4 (3 pts.) Refer to Thought Question 5 on p.71. The headline was based
on a study in which a representative sample of over 400,000 adults in
the U.S. were asked a series of questions, including level of education
and on how many of the past 30 days they felt physically and emotionally
healthy.
- For this study, what was the intended explanatory
variable---education or health?
What was the intended response variable---education or health?
- Which one of the three "difficulties and disasters in
observational studies" p.84 is most worrisome? 1. Confounding
variables and the implications of causation 2. Extending the results
inappropriately 3. Using the past as a source of data (Circle one.)
#6. (1 pt.) Suppose researchers were interested in determining the
relationship, if any, between brain cancer and the use of cellular
telephones. Which would be better? (a) an experiment; or (b) a
case-control study (Circle one.)
#7. (1 pt.) Researchers have found that women who take oral
contraceptives (birth control pills) are at higher risk of having a
heart attack or stroke and that the risk is substantially higher if a
woman smokes. In investigating the relationship between taking oral
contraceptives (the explanatory variable) and having a heart attack or
stroke (the response variable), smoking would be called (a) a
confounding variable; or (b) an interacting variable (Circle one.)
#12 (3 pts.) Suppose you wanted to know if men or women students
spend more money on clothes. You consider two different plans for
carrying out an observational study: Plan 1: Ask the participants how
much they spent on clothes during the last 3 months; then compare the
men and women. Plan 2: Ask the participants to keep a diary in which
they record their clothing expenditures for the next 3 months; then
compare the men and women.
- Which of these plans is a retrospective study? Circle one: Plan 1
or Plan 2
- What term is used for the other plan?
- Which of the difficulties and disasters p.84 would apply most to
Plan 1? Circle it:
- Confounding variables and the implications of causation
- Extending the results inappropriately
- Using the past as a source of data.
#13 (4 pts.) Suppose an observational study finds that people who
use public transportation to get to work have better knowledge of
current affairs than those who drive to work, but that the relationship
is weaker for well-educated people. Label each of the following as
being Explanatory, Response, Confounding, or Interacting variable:
- Method of getting to work ; Circle one: E R C I
- Knowledge of current affairs; Circle one: E R C I
- Level of education; Circle one: E R C I
- Whether the participant reads a daily newspaper; Circle one: E R
C I
#15 (6 pts.) A headline in the SACRAMENTO BEE (11 Dec 1997, p.A15)
read, "Study: Daily drink cuts death," and the article began
with the statement, "One drink a day can be good for health,
scientists are reporting, confirming earlier research in a new study
that is the largest to date of the effects of alcohol consumption in the
U.S." The article also noted that "most subjects were white,
middle-class and married, and more likely than the rest of the
U.S. population to be college-educated."
- Explain briefly
why this study could not have been an experiment.
- Is the headline justified? Answer yes or no.
- The study was based on recording drinking habits for the 490,000
participants in 1982, and then noting death rates for the next 9 years.
Thus, it was a (i)retrospective (ii)prospective study. (Circle one.)
- Circle any of the difficulties and disasters in observational
studies p.84 that apply (there may be more than one): 1. Confounding
variables and the implications of causation. 2. Extending the
results inappropriately 3. Using the past as a source of data
#20 (1 pt.) In which of the following is the "experimenter
effect" most likely to be present? (circle one): (a) a double-blind
experiment (b) a single-blind experiment; or (c) an experiment with no
blinding
CHAPTER 4
#17 (2 pts.) Identify each of the following studies as a Survey,
Experiment, Observational study, or Case study:
- A doctor claims to be able to cure migraine headaches. A
researcher administers a questionnaire to each of the patients he claims
to have cured: Circle one: S E O C
- A large company wants to compare two incentive plans for
increasing sales. The company randomly assigns a number of its sales
staff to receive each kind of incentive and compares the average change
in sales of the employees under the two plans. Circle one: S E O C
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