Question
Based on the two-way frequency table, what is the marginal relative frequency of people who play winter sports? Round your answer to the nearest whole percentage.
(1 point)
Responses
75%
75%
55%
55%
45%
45%
(1 point)
Responses
75%
75%
55%
55%
45%
45%
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To calculate the marginal relative frequency of people who play winter sports, you would need the actual counts from the two-way frequency table referring to the number of people who play winter sports versus those who do not.
The marginal relative frequency is calculated by taking the total number of people who play winter sports and dividing it by the total number of respondents, then multiplying by 100 to convert it to a percentage.
If you can provide the data from the two-way frequency table, I can help you calculate the marginal relative frequency accurately. Without the specific counts, it's not possible to determine which of the provided options (75%, 55%, or 45%) is the correct answer.
The marginal relative frequency is calculated by taking the total number of people who play winter sports and dividing it by the total number of respondents, then multiplying by 100 to convert it to a percentage.
If you can provide the data from the two-way frequency table, I can help you calculate the marginal relative frequency accurately. Without the specific counts, it's not possible to determine which of the provided options (75%, 55%, or 45%) is the correct answer.
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