assignment is fine. Chris has heard that sweet, fruity "girlie drinks" are popular with teenage girls in the U.S.1 and decided to do a relevant study in the rat lab. Each rat was given experience with two different fruit flavored solutions (grape and cherry). One of the flavored solutions contained alcohol and the other did not contain alcohol. Each rat got one of the two solutions on each day, alternating between the two solutions for a total of 10 days. Afterwards, each rat was given a direct choice between the two fruit flavors (two-bottle choice between grape and cherry solutions, with no alcohol in either solution), to determine whether they drink more of one fruit-flavored solution than the other. Chris shares the choice-test data with you. The SPSS file "alc pref.say" in the S: drive folder Psychology > Statistics Fall 2021 contains the data. The data represent each rat's consumption of the alcohol-paired flavor (alc flav, in g) and of the non-alcohol-paired flavor (noalc fl, in g). Chris had psychological methods and statistics a long time ago and is rusty; Chris knows that you are taking statistics and asks for a refresher how to use statistics to help answer the research question.(2) State a formal, logical process that is useful for making inferences about a host of different population characteristics, which Chris can use to draw conclusions from the choice-test data. (Remember, Chris had this stu' before, so it is review; you can be thorough and concise.) Then apply the process to the data to answer the research question. alc flav noalc fl 23.50 5.00 23.00 3.00 W N 27.00 6.50 35.00 1.00 A 15.00 1.50 29.00 1.50 36.00 10.00 22.00 30.00 24.50 16.50 10 10.50 18.00alc flav noalc fl 11 24.00 16.00 12 34.00 14.50 13 45.00 18.00 14 38.50 10.50 15 26.00 8.50 16 19.50 20.00 17 46.00 3.50 18 25.00 11.00 19 21.00 15.00 20 21.50 8.50alc flav noalc fl 21 28.00 6.50 22 21.00 41.00 23 15.00 16.00 24 13.00 3.50 25 34.50 12.00 26 27.00 8.50 27 41.00 7.00 28 26.00 5.00 29 29.00 7.00 30 27.00 9.50