Is there a relation between incidents of child abuse and number of runaway children? A random sample of cities (over 10,000 population) gave the following information about the number of reported incidents of child abuse and the number of runaway children. (Reference: Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice.) City 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Abuse cases 109 50 12 97 33 88 14 55 67 57 115 106 41 26 81 Runaways 630 280 282 520 167 427 184 329 358 690 781 547 483 422 426 Use a 1% level of significance to test the claim that there is a monotone-increasing relationship between the ranks of incidents of abuse and number of runaway children. (a) Rank-order abuse using 1 as the largest data value. Also rank-order runaways using 1 as the largest data value. Then construct a table of ranks to be used for a Spearman rank correlation test.     City Abuse Cases Rank x Runaways Rank y d = x - y d2

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Is there a relation between incidents of child abuse and number of runaway children? A random sample of cities (over 10,000 population) gave the following information about the number of reported incidents of child abuse and the number of runaway children. (Reference: Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice.)

City 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Abuse cases 109 50 12 97 33 88 14 55 67 57 115 106 41 26 81
Runaways 630 280 282 520 167 427 184 329 358 690 781 547 483 422 426

Use a 1% level of significance to test the claim that there is a monotone-increasing relationship between the ranks of incidents of abuse and number of runaway children.

(a) Rank-order abuse using 1 as the largest data value. Also rank-order runaways using 1 as the largest data value. Then construct a table of ranks to be used for a Spearman rank correlation test.
 
 
City Abuse Cases
Rank x
Runaways
Rank y
d = x - y d2

 

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