subject
Mathematics, 25.04.2020 00:25 blake2001

Recall the experiment described in Review Question 16.11 on page 314, where errors on a driving simulator were obtained for subjects whose orange juice had been laced with controlled amounts of vodka. Now assume that repeated measures are taken across all five conditions for each of five subjects. (Assume that no lingering effects occur because sufficient time elapses between successive tests, and no order bias appears because the orders of the five conditions are equalized across the five subjects.) Driving Errors as a function of alcohol consumption (ounces) Subject Zero One Two Four Six Tsubject A 1 4 6 15 20 46 B 1 3 1 6 25 36 C 3 1 2 9 10 25 D 6 7 10 17 10 50 E 4 5 7 9 9 34 T=15 20 26 56 74 EX = G= 191 EX^2 = 2371

(a) Summarize the results in an ANOVA table. If you did Review Question 16.11 and saved your results, you can use the known values for SS between, SS within, and SS total to short-circuit computations.

(b) If appropriate, estimate the effect sizes and use Tukey’s HSD test.

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Mathematics

question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 15:30
Which is the length of the hypotenuse of the triangle a. 94ft b. 214 ft c. 33ft d. 37 ft
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 19:30
The position of a moving particle is given by the position function: f(t)=-9t-t^2-0.2t^3+0.1t^4 0 a. at what time does the particle reverse direction? b. when is the displacement positive? (round one decimal place and answer in interval notation) c. when is the displacement negative? (round one decimal place and answer in interval notation) d. when is the particle’s acceleration positive? (round one decimal place and answer in interval notation) e. when is the particle’s acceleration negative? (round one decimal place and answer in interval notation)
Answers: 3
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 21:00
Which line is parallel to the line that passes through the points (2, –5) and (–4, 1) a. y=-x+5 b. y=-2/3x+3 c. y=2/3x-2 d. y=x+5
Answers: 2
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 21:30
Janice determined there were 10 possible outcomes when tossing two coins and spinning a spinner numbered 1 through 6. what is the correct number? what might have been janice's error?
Answers: 3
You know the right answer?
Recall the experiment described in Review Question 16.11 on page 314, where errors on a driving simu...
Questions
question
Chemistry, 10.04.2020 05:57
question
Mathematics, 10.04.2020 05:57
question
Chemistry, 10.04.2020 05:58
question
Mathematics, 10.04.2020 05:58
Questions on the website: 13722359