The third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey collected body fat percentage (BF%) and gender data from 13,601 subjects ages 20 to 80. The average BF% for the 6,580 men in the sample was 23.9, and this value was 35.0 for the 7,021 women. The standard error for the difference between the average men and women BF%s was 0.114. Do these data provide convincing evidence that men and women have different average BF%s. You may assume that the distribution of the point estimate is nearly norma

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Answer:

Yes, the data provides convincing evidence that men and women have different average BF%s

Step-by-step explanation:

The given parameters are;

The number of the subjects ages 20 to 80 = 13,601

The body fat percentage, BF%, for the 6,580 men, [tex]\overline x_1[/tex] = 23.9

The body fat percentage, BF%, for the 7,021 women, [tex]\overline x_2[/tex] = 35.0

The standard error for the difference between the average men and women = 0.144

The null hypothesis, H₀; [tex]\overline x_1[/tex] = [tex]\overline x_2[/tex]

The alternative hypothesis, Hₐ; [tex]\overline x_1[/tex] ≠ [tex]\overline x_2[/tex]

The test statistic = (35.0 - 23.9)/(0.114) = 97.368

Therefore, given that the z-test is larger than the critical-z, we reject the null hypothesis, H₀, therefore, there is convincing statistical evidence to suggest that men and women have different body average BF%