Statistics for The Behavioral Sciences (MindTap Course List)
Statistics for The Behavioral Sciences (MindTap Course List)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781305504912
Author: Frederick J Gravetter, Larry B. Wallnau
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 16, Problem 11P

Ii. Problem 13 in Chapter 15 examined the relationship between weight and income for a sample of n = 8 men. Weights were classified in five categories and had a mean of M = 3 with S S = 18 . Income, measured in thousands, had a mean score of M = 88 with S S = 21 . 6 0 9 , and S P = 33 0 .

a. Find the regression equation for predicting income from weight. (Identify the weight scores as X values and the income scores as Y values.)

b. What percentage of the variance in the income is accounted for by the regression equation? (Compute the correlation, r, then find r 2 .)

c. Does the regression equation account for a significant portion of the variance in income? Use α = .05 to evaluate the F-ratio.

The researchers cited in the previous problem also examined the weight/salary relationship for men and found a positive relationship, suggesting that we have very different standards for men than for women (Judge & Cable, 2010). The following are data similar to those obtained for a sample of male professionals. Again, weight relative to height is coded in five categories from 1 = thinnest to 5 = heaviest. Income is recorded as thousands earned annually.

a. Calculate the Person correlation for these data.

b. Is the correlation statistically significant? Use a two-tailed test with α = .05 .

    X

Y

4
151
3
52
3
52
2
73
1
49
3
92
1
56
5
143

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