Video game players and divided attention tasks. Human Factors (May 2014) published the results of a study

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Video game players and divided attention tasks. Human Factors (May 2014) published the results of a study designed to determine whether video game players are better than non-video game players at crossing the street when presented with distractions. Participants (college students)

entered a street crossing simulator. The simulator was designed to have cars traveling at various high rates of speed in both directions. During the crossing, the students also performed a memory task as a distraction. The researchers found that students who are video game players took an average of 5.1 seconds to cross the street, with a standard deviation of .8 seconds. Assume that the time, x, to cross the street for the population of video game players has m = 5.1 and s = .8. Now consider a sample of 30 students and let x represent the sample mean time (in seconds) to cross the street in the simulator.

a. Find P1x 7 5.52.

b. The 30 students in the sample are all non-video game players. What inference can you make about m and/or s for the population of non-video game players? Explain.

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