For a random sample of Harvard University psychology majors, the responses on political ideology had a mean of 3.18 and standard deviation of 1.72 for 51 nonvegetarian students and a mean of 2.22 and standard deviation of .67 for the 20 vegetarian students. When we use software to compare the means with a significance test, we obtain the following printout.Variances T DF Prob>|T|Unequal 2.9146 41.9 0.006Interpret the P-value, in context, based on its definition.

Respuesta :

Answer:

From the test give in the question it is obvious that  there is enough evidence to show that population mean varies for vegetarian and non-vegetarian

The P-value helps affirm the null hypothesis claims,The P-value attains  values relatively as large as that which exists in the sample given,if the null hypothesis is right

Step-by-step explanation:

From the question we are told that

Sample mean [tex]\=x_1=3.18[/tex]

Standard deviation [tex]\delta_! =1.72[/tex]

Sample size [tex]n_1 =51[/tex]

Sample mean [tex]\=x_2=2.22[/tex]

Standard deviation [tex]\delta_2 =0.67[/tex]

Sample size [tex]n_2=20[/tex]

Generally this is a two tailed test

therefore

   Null hypothesis  = [tex]h_0 :P_v_e_g= P_n_o_n_v_e_g[/tex]

  Alternative hypothesis [tex]H_a : P_v_e_g \neq P_n_o_n_v_e_g[/tex]

From the test give in the question it is obvious that  there is enough evidence to show that population mean varies for vegetarian and non-vegetarian

The P-value helps affirm the null hypothesis claims,The P-value attains  values relatively as large as that which exists in the sample given,if the null hypothesis is right