Chat with our AI personalities
The research question is what your research is trying to explain/find answer. It generally attempts to find a way to relate your experiment with a target population (usually humankind).The statistical question deals with your specific experiment as in how your experiment affects your sample population. It is essentially what you are trying to determine.Example:A company has developed a new pesticide designed to control pine beetles in the coniferous forests, but the law requires that it's effect on fish populations is tested first before it can be released. Thus, we'll test the pesticide on the mortality of a chose fish species in our lab.Research Question: To what extent will the use of the new pesticide harm native fish poplulations?Statistical Question: How does the pesticide, when introduced to the water source, affect the fish we have in our lab?
Apples, like any other fresh fruit, are generally a healthy part of a diet, whether you are pregnant or not; but to be extra careful, wash them first in case there is any pesticide residue.
The chemical pesticides cause the chemical pollution for the soil, the water & the air, they cause serious health risks such as cancer, the nervous system diseases and the reproductive problems in people who exposed to the pesticides through home and garden exposure
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
its questions like "how many lbs of active ingredient of 25 dylox would you need to cover 5 acres, if the recommended rate is 3 lbs of commercial product per acre" The ask you basic math too, like the area of a square, circle and triangle.