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4 votes
A researcher interested in the effects of humor on memory randomly assigns 16 participants to either the humor group or the no-humor group. The humor group reads humorous sentences and the no-humor group reads non-humorous sentences .On a later memory test, the researcher finds that in terms of the direction of the means, the humor group had better memory than the no-humor group, but this effect was not significant (p = 0.06) What should this researcher do?

a. Because the effect, looks as though it is barely missing significance, she can just treat it as though the effect exists and communicate this exciting effect to her colleagues.
b. She can abandon the study of humor on memory because given her results it is obvious that humor has no effect on memory.
c. She can attempt to increase her statistical power by using a two-tailed hypothesis test rather than a one-tailed hypothesis test.
d. Because the effect looks as though it is barely missing significance, and her sample size is fairly small, she can increase her sample size to increase her statistical power to detect the effect.

User Tim Bodeit
by
5.1k points

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

C

Explanation:

User Philipp Serfling
by
5.8k points
5 votes

Answer: option c

Step-by-step explanation: with a two-tailed hypothesis she can find the way to go deep on the study, she will be able to increase the statistical power. She will be able to separate in specifics groups.

User Mick Mnemonic
by
4.6k points
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