Many people now turn to the Internet to get information on health-related topics. The paper An Examination

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Many people now turn to the Internet to get information on health-related topics. The paper “An Examination of Health, Medical and Nutritional Information on the Internet: A Comparative Study of Wikipedia, WebMD and the Mayo Clinic Websites” (The International Journal of Communication and Health [2015]: 30–38) used Flesch reading ease scores (a measure of reading difficulty based on factors such as sentence length and number of syllables in the words used) to score pages on Wikipedia and on WebMD. Higher Flesch scores correspond to more difficult reading levels. The paper reported that for a representative sample of health-related pages on Wikipedia, the mean Flesch score was 26.7 and the standard deviation of the Flesch scores was 14.1. For a representative sample of pages from WebMD, the mean score was 43.9 and the standard deviation was 19.4. Suppose that these means and standard deviations were based on samples of 40 pages from each site. Is there convincing evidence that the mean reading level for health-related pages differs for Wikipedia and WebMD? Test the relevant hypotheses using a significance level of 0.05.

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Introduction To Statistics And Data Analysis

ISBN: 9781337793612

6th Edition

Authors: Roxy Peck, Chris Olsen, Tom Short

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