Concept explainers
It is well known that a placebo, a fake medication or treatment, can sometimes have a positive effect just because patients often expect the medication or treatment to be helpful. The article “Beware the Nocebo Effect” (New York Times, Aug. 12, 2012) gave examples of a less familiar phenomenon, the tendency for patients informed of possible side effects to actually experience those side effects. The article cited a study reported in The Journal of Sexual Medicine in which a group of patients diagnosed with benign prostatic hyperplasia was randomly divided into two subgroups. One subgroup of size 55 received a compound of proven efficacy along with counseling that a potential side effect of the treatment was erectile dysfunction. The other subgroup of size 52 was given the same treatment without counseling. The percentage of the no-counseling subgroup that reported one or more sexual side effects was 15.3%, whereas 43.6% of the counseling subgroup reported at least one sexual side effect. State and test the appropriate hypotheses at significance level .05 to decide whether the nocebo effect is operating here. [Note: The estimated expected number of “successes” in the no-counseling sample is a bit shy of 10, but not by enough to be of great concern (some sources use a less conservative cutoff of 5 rather than 10).]
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Chapter 9 Solutions
Student Solutions Manual for Devore's Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences, 9th
- What is an experiment?arrow_forwardThere is growing concern over a possible causal link between consumption of diet soda and obesity. Gallup took in 2013 a nationally representative sample of 2027 adults and asked them about their soda consumption. In the sample, 921 adults described themselves as overweight, and 295 of them said that they mostly drink diet soda. The remaining 1106 adults described themselves as about right weight, and 210 of them said that they mostly drink diet soda. Is there evidence at 1% level that the proportions of adults who mostly drink diet soda with overweight and with about right weight are different? Which method will you use to perform the test? Choose the correct one. 1-sample T test 2-sample T test 2-sample Z test. 2-proportion Z test What is the pooled proportion? State the null and alternative hypotheses: Which distribution will you use for your test? Give the test statistic: Find the p-value: Decision and Conclusion:arrow_forwardResearchers have observed that high school students who watched educational television programs as young children tend to have higher grades than their peers who did not watch educational television. Is this an observational study or a controlled experiment? Explain why.arrow_forward
- Hepatitis B and Pancreatic Cancer. The article “Study Links Hepatitis B and Cancer of Pancreas” by D. Grady, appeared in the September 29, 2008 issue of the NewYork Times. It reported that, for the first time, a study showed that people with pancreatic cancer are more likely than those without the disease to have been infected with the hepatitis B virus. The study by M. Hassan et al., titled “Association Between Hepatitis B Virus and Pancreatic Cancer” (Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol. 26, No. 28, pp. 4557–4562) compared 476 people who had pancreatic cancer with 879 healthy control subjects. All were tested to see whether they had ever been infected with the viruses that cause hepatitis B or hepatitis C. The results were that no connection was found to hepatitis C, but the cancer patients were twice as likely as the healthy subjects to have had hepatitis B. The researchers noted, however, that “. . . while the study showed an association, it did not prove cause and effect. More work…arrow_forwardThe Insurance Institute for Highway Safety issued a press release titled "Teen Drivers Often Ignoring Bans on Using Cell Phones" (June 9, 2008). The following quote is from the news release. Just 1–2 months prior to the ban's Dec. 1, 2006 start, 11% of teen drivers were observed using cell phones as they left school in the afternoon. About 5 months after the ban took effect, 12% of teen drivers were observed using cell phones. Suppose that the two samples of teen drivers (before the ban, after the ban) are regarded as representative of these populations of teen drivers. Suppose also that 300 teen drivers were observed before the ban (so n1 = 300 and p̂1 = 0.11) and 150 teen drivers were observed after the ban. (a) Construct a 95% large-sample confidence interval for the difference in the proportion using a cell phone while driving before the ban and the proportion after the ban. (Use p1 − p2. Use a table or SALT. Round your answers to three decimal places.) ,…arrow_forwardStudies have suggested that alcohol abuse and disorders are found to be more prevalent during early adulthood than in any other age group, with about 9% of young adults (age 18 to 29 years) meeting the criteria to be labeled as alcoholic. In addition, surveys have shown that college students tend to drink more than their peers who do not attend college. You want to test to see if there are differences in excessive alcohol use in young adults that attend college versus those who do not, so you surveyed 405 young adults, age 19 to 22, about their alcohol use by asking the question, "Have you consumed alcohol to the point of intoxication at least once within the past month?" with the following results. Young Adults Attending College Young Adults Not Attending College n1 = 255 n2 = 150 y1 = 96 said "yes" y2 = 44 said "yes" p̂1 = 96 255 p̂2 = 44 150 (a) Calculate the test statistic. (Round your answer to two decimal places.) (b) If H0:…arrow_forward
- A clinical researcher would like to know whether a certain drug is more effective at treating lepression than just psychotherapy alone. In order to study this topic, the researcher gains access to a population of individuals diagnosed with depression and administers surveys to a random subset of that population. To assess the relationship between therapy type and depression symptoms, the survey asks participants what their current treatment plan involves (drug therapy, psychotherapy, both drug and psychotherapy, or no therapy) and what their current depression symptoms include. This study is a(n): observational study randomized comparative experiment stratified random sample block designarrow_forwardDr. Guidry conducts a study examining the relationship between the number of friends one has and the experience of daily stress and life satisfaction. She randomly samples 1,500 elderly men and women in Nashville, Tennessee (the state capital), located in the southern United States. Dr. Guidry submits her study for publication in a scientific journal. If one of the peer reviewers is concerned about the external validity of her study, which of the following is the most important aspect of Dr. Guidry's study to consider? the number of significant findings the random sampling technique used to recruit the participants the number of people in the sample the use of three measured variablesarrow_forwardThe article “Americans are ‘Getting the Wrong Idea’on Alcohol and Health” (Associated Press, April 19, 2005)reported that observational studies in recent years thathave concluded that moderate drinking is associated with a reduction in the risk of heart disease may be mis-leading. The article refers to a study conducted by theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention that showedthat moderate drinkers, as a group, tended to be better educated, wealthier, and more active than nondrinkers. Explain why the existence of these potentially con-founding factors prevent drawing the conclusion that moderate drinking is the cause of reduced risk of heartdisease.arrow_forward
- In a survey of 1220 adults in a country, 58% said the country's leader should release all medical information that might affect their ability to serve. The study is observational, an experiment, because it applies does not apply a treatment to the adults.arrow_forwardSince this research focuses on sleep habits in college students and its effect on mental health, we have proposed the research question to be what the prevalence of college student's mental health issues are due to poor sleeping habits.Previous research has shown that anxiety and depression can be two indicators of poor sleep habits in college students (Becker et al., 2018). As mentioned before, college students are also at risk of developing poor sleep habits because, as freshmen, they transition into a more significant workload than they are accustomed to doing. They are also given more freedom with their time. So, we predict a relationship between mental health and low amounts of sleep-in students. In contrast, the alternative outcome is that there will be no mental health problems arising as students lose sleep for long periods. Since getting good sleep allows us to function better throughout our days, we will likely see the impact bad quality and quantity of sleep will have on…arrow_forwardSince this research focuses on sleep habits in college students and its effect on mental health, we have proposed the research question to be what the prevalence of college student's mental health issues are due to poor sleeping habits.Previous research has shown that anxiety and depression can be two indicators of poor sleep habits in college students (Becker et al., 2018). As mentioned before, college students are also at risk of developing poor sleep habits because, as freshmen, they transition into a more significant workload than they are accustomed to doing. They are also given more freedom with their time. So, we predict a relationship between mental health and low amounts of sleep-in students. In contrast, the alternative outcome is that there will be no mental health problems arising as students lose sleep for long periods. Since getting good sleep allows us to function better throughout our days, we will likely see the impact bad quality and quantity of sleep will have on…arrow_forward
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