Short Answer

If a researcher replicates the calorie estimate and weight study with the same sample size of 2222 (df=20df = 20) and critical value of .444.444, but calculates a Pearson's rr of .50-.50, apply the hand-calculation decision rule to determine and justify whether they should reject or retain the null hypothesis.

Question: If a researcher replicates the calorie estimate and weight study with the same sample size of 2222 (df=20df = 20) and critical value of .444.444, but calculates a Pearson's rr of .50-.50, apply the hand-calculation decision rule to determine and justify whether they should reject or retain the null hypothesis.

Sample answer: The researcher should reject the null hypothesis. The calculated Pearson's rr of .50-.50 is more extreme (has a greater absolute value) than the critical value of .444.444, indicating that the relationship is statistically significant.

Key points:

  • The calculated Pearson's rr of .50-.50 is compared to the critical value of .444.444.
  • Because the calculated value is more extreme than the critical value, the decision is to reject the null hypothesis.
  • The result represents a statistically significant relationship (p<.05p < .05).

Rubric: The answer must state that the null hypothesis is rejected and justify this decision by demonstrating that the calculated Pearson's rr (.50-.50) is more extreme than the critical value (.444.444).

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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