QUESTION 2 A Canadian study measuring depression level in teens (as reported in
ID: 2921131 • Letter: Q
Question
QUESTION 2
A Canadian study measuring depression level in teens (as reported in the Journal of Adolescence, vol. 25, 2002) randomly sampled 112 male teens and 101 female teens, and scored them on a common depression scale (higher score representing more depression). The researchers suspected that the mean depression score for male teens is higher than for female teens, and wanted to check whether data would support this hypothesis.
The following is the (edited) output for the test:
From the output we learn that:
A. the data provide sufficient evidence to reject H0 and to conclude that the mean depression score for male teens is larger than that of female teens.
B. the data provide sufficient evidence to conclude that male and female teens do not differ in mean depression score.
C. the data do not provide sufficient evidence to conclude that the mean depression score of male teens is larger than that of female teens.
A. the data provide sufficient evidence to reject H0 and to conclude that the mean depression score for male teens is larger than that of female teens.
B. the data provide sufficient evidence to conclude that male and female teens do not differ in mean depression score.
C. the data do not provide sufficient evidence to conclude that the mean depression score of male teens is larger than that of female teens.
Explanation / Answer
The correct answer is C. The results are not stastically significant.
the data do not provide sufficient evidence to conclude that the mean depression score of male teens is larger than that of female teens.