Chapter 12: Q. T12.8 (page 784)
Exercises T12.4鈥揟12.8 refer to the following setting. An old saying in golf is 鈥淵ou drive for show and you putt for dough.鈥 The point is that good putting is more important than long driving for shooting low scores and hence winning money. To see if this is the case, data from a random sample of 69 of the nearly 1000 players on the PGA Tour鈥檚 world money list are examined. The average number of putts per hole (fewer is better) and the player鈥檚 total winnings for the previous season are recorded and a least-squares regression line was fitted to the data. Assume the conditions for
inference about the slope are met. Here is computer output from the regression analysis:
T12.8 Which of the following would make the calculation in Exercise T12.7 invalid?
a. If the scatterplot of the sample data wasn鈥檛 perfectly linear.
b. If the distribution of earnings has an outlier.
c. If the distribution of earnings wasn鈥檛 approximately Normal.
d. If the earnings for golfers with small putting averages was much more variable than the earnings for golfers with large putting averages.
e. If the standard deviation of earnings is much larger than the standard deviation of putting average.
Short Answer
The correct answer is option (d) If the earnings for golfers with small putting averages was much more variable than the earnings for golfers with large putting averages.





