Math, asked by Gargi4532, 10 months ago

While investigation the health claims of an herbal supplement, a researcher recorded numbness or tingling in people's fingers or toes after they had been randomly assigned to either the supplement or a placebo (a pill that looked like a supplement or medicine but was neither). The researcher found that the ten of the twenty-five people in the supplement group reported symptoms while seven of the twenty in the placebo group reported symptoms. What is a correct test statistics in this case?

a?

Answers

Answered by sunidhi86
2
While investigation the health claims of an herbal supplement, a researcher recorded numbness or tingling in people's fingers or toes after they had been randomly assigned to either the supplement or a placebo (a pill that looked like a supplement or medicine but was neither). The researcher found that the ten of the twenty-five people in the supplement group reported symptoms while seven of the twenty in the placebo group reported symptoms. What is a correct test statistics in this case?

a?
Answered by Anonymous
0
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While investigation the health claims of an herbal supplement, a researcher recorded numbness or tingling in people's fingers or toes after they had been randomly assigned to either the supplement or a placebo (a pill that looked like a supplement or medicine but was neither). The researcher found that the ten of the twenty-five people in the supplement group reported symptoms while seven of the twenty in the placebo group reported symptoms. What is a correct test statistics in this case?

a?

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