Reference no: EM131191909
Recent events in Europe have brought attention to the fact that sometimes zoos euthanize animals that are not appropriate for breeding (https://www.cnn.com/2014/02/10/world/europe/denmark-zoo-giraffe/ ). People often claim that castration would be a solution. When I worked at CARE, a baboon sanctuary (https://www.primatecare.org/), the staff there said that male baboons often lost a large amount of muscle mass after castration so this procedure isn't without risk. Those observations were anecdotal however and maybe they get bigger sometimes instead. Imagine that we conduct a study in which we randomly assign sets of male baboons into two groups (castration and control) and measure their body masses. Imagine we collect the following mass data from each set of baboons:
Control: 90.51 88.55 92.52 91.45 92.75 90.58 89.55 90.98 92.82 90.32 91.34 90.4188.92 90.23 92.65 89.92
Castration: 89.71 86.14 90.86 89.94 90.82 89.52 88.83 88.02 91.44 87.93 89.78 87.73 91.88 87.83 90.83
(a) State the biological question that we will be testing with our two-tailed test, be precise.
If we wished to know whether we could do a homoscedastic t test (or have no choice and must do a heteroscedastic test) we need to do a preliminary F ratio test.
(b) Conduct the calculation for the F ratio df(num) = ______ df(den) = ______ test and fill in the blanks to the right. Fcalc = ______ Fcrit (alpha=0.05) = ______
(c) State the formal statistical conclusion of your F ratio test and what the practical conclusion of this test is (i.e., what t tests may be performed on this data).
(d) Perform a two-tailed df = ______ tcalc = ______ tcrit (alpha=0.05) = ______ heteroscedastic t test using the data above and fill in the blanks to the right. (round df to the correct whole number).
(e) State the biological conclusion of your t test in the box below. Use the grammar described in lecture and state with what degree of confidence you make your conclusion by providing the most specific range of p values from the table provided in lecture. You must use the phrase "significantly smaller", "significantly larger" or "not significantly different" in your answer. Note: no credit will be given for ANY text outside the box or hard to read answers.