Short Answer

In Mehl and colleagues' study, if they determined that their sample difference of d=0.06d = 0.06 was fairly likely to occur under the null hypothesis, how must they apply this finding to their overall conclusion about a sex difference in talkativeness in the population?

Question: In Mehl and colleagues' study, if they determined that their sample difference of d=0.06d = 0.06 was fairly likely to occur under the null hypothesis, how must they apply this finding to their overall conclusion about a sex difference in talkativeness in the population?

Sample answer: They must apply this finding by retaining the null hypothesis and concluding that there is no evidence of a sex difference in talkativeness in the population.

Key points:

  • Retain the null hypothesis.
  • Conclude no evidence of a sex difference in the population.

Rubric: The answer must state that the researchers retain the null hypothesis and conclude there is no evidence of a difference in the population.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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