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Discovering Statistics Study Set 4
Exam 3: The Phoenix of Statistics
Path 4
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Question 1
Multiple Choice
A sports nutritionist undertook a study to examine the impact of a reduction in protein intake and team performance, which showed a statistical significance between reduced protein intake and increased team performance. How can she explain to her manager that this does not mean she should start removing protein from the team's diet?
Question 2
Multiple Choice
A manager of an inclusive sports programme in schools was concerned about the lack of girls being recruited on to the programme. There were thirty places on the programme and fifty children had applied, of which only ten were girls. Theoretically, all the children in the participating schools have an equal probability of being recruited as they all match the selection criteria, i.e. they are children at a participating school. However, the manager has data that suggests that boys are more likely to join school based sports programmes than girls based on data from across the school sports programme nationally and from within her own programme historically. However the manager has heavily promoted this initiative, specifically targeting girls and therefore wants to determine the probability that still fewer girls than boys will join. What formula could she use to determine this probability?
Question 3
Multiple Choice
Your sports and exercise lecturer has devoted the past ten weeks to teaching you the Bayesian approach and is now asking that you offer a critique of it. What key criticism could you raise?
Question 4
Multiple Choice
A customer services strategy manager for a national wellbeing and fitness company is interested in assessing customer usage of their gyms across 20 sites nationally. Different gym managers have collected and analysed data from each of the sites but the resultant twenty reports showed differing p-values, some sites found a statistical significance between increased opening hours of gyms and usage and others did not. Which of the following would it be useful for her to review?
Question 5
Multiple Choice
You have just joined the performance modelling team for a national elite sports programme. Your boss has decided that from now on the team will adopt a Bayesian approach. However, not all staff understand what this is; your boss asks you to present a training session. How would you explain a Bayesian approach in your session introduction?
Question 6
Multiple Choice
A sports researcher wanted to assess the likelihood that girls score more goals than boys do in five a-side soccer. She conducted one study where the probability of making a Type I error was 0.05 and a Type II error was 0.2. Does her research have empirical probability?
Question 7
Multiple Choice
You lead a product-testing unit for a large sports nutrition company. Your team has conducted forty trials of a new energy supplement but you are not sure if the results are conclusive enough to urge the company to start producing it. A new data analyst has joined your team suggesting that meta-analysis might be a good idea, do you agree?
Question 8
Multiple Choice
A sports student conducted a Bayesian analysis of time spent watching sports and improved academic performance. He calculated a Bayes factor of 1. Should he use time spent watching sports as a predictor of academic performance?