(Steps Shown) In How It Works 11.1, we conducted a one-way between-groups ANOVA on an abbreviated data set from research by Irwin and colleagues (2004)
Question: In How It Works 11.1, we conducted a one-way between-groups ANOVA on an abbreviated data set from research by Irwin and colleagues (2004) on adherence to an exercise regimen. Participants were asked to attend a monthly group education program to help them change their exercise behavior. Attendance was taken and participants were divided into three categories:
those who attended fewer than 5 sessions, those who attended between 5 and 8 sessions, and those who attended between 9 and 12 sessions. The dependent variable was number of minutes of exercise per week. Here are the data once again:
| 5 sessions | 5-8 sessions | 9-12 sessions |
| 155 | 199 | 230 |
| 120 | 160 | 214 |
| 130 | 184 | 195 |
| 209 |
- What conclusion did you draw in step 6 of the ANOVA? Why could you not be more specific in your conclusion? That is, why is an additional test necessary when our ANOVA is statistically significant?
- Conduct a Tukey HSD test for this example. State your conclusions based on this test. Show all calculations.
- If we did not reject the null hypothesis for every possible pair of means, then why can’t we conclude that the two means are the same?
Deliverable: Word Document 