Task 3: Children wearing superhero costumes are more likely to harm themselves because of the unrealistic impression
Question:
Task 3: Children wearing superhero costumes are more likely to harm themselves because of the unrealistic impression of invincibility that these costumes could create. For example, children have reported to hospital with severe injuries because of trying ‘to initiate flight without having planned for landing strategies’ (Davies, Surridge, Hole, & Munro-Davies, 2007). I can relate to the imagined power that a costume bestows upon you; even now, I have been known to dress up as Fisher by donning a beard and glasses and trailing a goat around on a lead in the hope that it might make me more knowledgeable about statistics. Imagine we had data (Superhero.sav) about the severity of injury (on a scale from 0, no injury, to 100, death) for children reporting to the emergency centre at hospitals and information on which superhero costume they were wearing
(hero): Spiderman, Superman, the Hulk or a teenage mutant ninja turtle. Use one-way ANOVA and multiple comparisons to test the hypotheses that different costumes give rise to more severe injuries. ②
Step by Step Answer:
Discovering Statistics Using IBM SPSS Statistics
ISBN: 9781446273043
4th Edition
Authors: Andy Field