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| Question 320494:  I was wondering if I can get help answering this problem. I chose #1
 Sex         X         Mean       St Dev        SE Mean
 F          116        1.95       1.51          0.14
 M          59         2.37       1.87          0.24
 (95% CI for mu(f) - mu(m):(-0.97,0.14)
 T-Test  mu(f)=mu(m) (vs not =): T= -1.49  P=0.14  DF=97
 For the variable "Time spent watching TV in Typical Day," the results of a two-sample t-procedure that compares a random sample of men and women at a college are shown above. What is the alternative hypothesis of the t-test?
 1.  μ1 − μ2 < 0
 2.  μ1 − μ2 = 0
 3.  μ1 − μ2 ≠ 0
 4.  μ1 − μ2 >
 Thanks,
 Kim
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! I was wondering if I can get help answering this problem. I chose #1 Sex X Mean St Dev SE Mean
 F 116 1.95 1.51 0.14
 M 59 2.37 1.87 0.24
 (95% CI for mu(f) - mu(m):(-0.97,0.14)
 T-Test mu(f)=mu(m) (vs not =): T= -1.49 P=0.14 DF=97
 For the variable "Time spent watching TV in Typical Day," the results of a two-sample t-procedure that compares a random sample of men and women at a college are shown above. What is the alternative hypothesis of the t-test?
 ---------------------
 Your problem statement says you are testing mu(f) = mu(m) (vs not =)
 ----------------------
 Since Ho must ALWAYS include equality, the
 alternate hypotheses is mu(f)-mu(m) is not equal to 0
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 Cheers,
 Stan H.
 
 
 1. μ1 − μ2 < 0
 2. μ1 − μ2 = 0
 3. μ1 − μ2 ≠ 0
 4. μ1 − μ2 >
 
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