Answer:
Statistical significance relates to whether an effect exists.
Practical significance refers to the magnitude of the effect.
And you can have statistical significance but not practical.
Step-by-step explanation:
Let's analize it with an example.
Suppose that your new treatment involves hair recovery.
You divide the population of the test in two different groups.
And you apply the treatment to only one of them.
You can see that the treatment works and there is a 3% improvment.
You have statistical significance. The treatment worked.
Now, if the test was expensive, the 3% improvement might not be practical.
Answer:
second quadrant
Step-by-step explanation:
(x, y ) → (x - 5, y + 3 ) means subtract 3 from the original x- coordinate and add 3 to the original y- coordinate.
(- 3, - 2 ) ← in third quadrant
→ (- 3 - 5, - 2 + 3) → (- 8, 1 ) ← in second quadrant
I think that you are mistaking the memory tool for something else
or a math book is trying to make math cute by calling them 'socatoa joe' and 'mr. pi' and such
anyway, SOH, CAH, TOA is the way to remember
Sine=oposite/hypotonuse
Cosine=adjacent/hypotonuse
Tangent=oposite/adjacent
(oposite side=side oposite the angle
adjacent is the side touching the angle that is not they hypotonuse
and of course the hypotonuse is the longest side aka, side oposite right angle)
Answer:
Is all of them !!
Step-by-step explanation:
Because they all have asymptote