We are told that the data is representative of the two populations (U.S. males aged 20-29 years and U.S. males aged 75+ years), and we will assume that researchers collected random samples. The samples are very large; therefore, the conditions are met for use of the T-test. Using StatCrunch, we find a T-score of 5.3 and a P-value of "< 0.0001." What can we conclude? Group of answer choices The data prove that, in the U.S., young men weigh about 4.9 kgs more on average than old men. The data suggest that young men weigh more on average than old men in the U.S., but that the difference in mean weights for the two groups is not statistically significant. The data provide strong evidence that young men weigh more on average than old men in the U.S. no conclusion is possible because we did not specify a significance level

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Answer:

The data provide strong evidence that young men weigh more on average than old men in the U.S

Step-by-step explanation:

Given :

The null hypothesis ; H0 : μ1 = μ2

The alternative hypothesis ; H1 : μ1 > μ2

T score = 5.3 ; Pvalue = < 0.0001

The decision region :

If Pvalue < α ; We reject the Null

If Pvalue > α ; We fail to reject the Null

When the α - level isn't stated, we usually assume a α - level of 5%

However, even at lower alpha level of 1% = 0.01 ;

The Pvalue < α

Hence, we can conclude that there is significant evidence that there is difference in the mean weight of young men and old men in the U.S