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To smell or not to smell

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If they could tell a difference, we asked which scent they preferred. ... Apply the scent directly to skin and omit cardboard. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: To smell or not to smell


1
To smell or not to smell
  • Our Math 5 Smelling Pre-test
  • Robin Deliso, Clare Gupta and Amory Loring

2
Our Goals
  • People spend an inordinate amount of money on
    beauty products, particularly perfume. Our goal
    is to assess whether those pricey scents are
    really better smelling? Can people smell
    money??
  • More precisely, can a group of Dartmouth students
    tell a difference between a designer perfumeCK
    Oneversus the WalMart knock-off version? And if
    so, which do they prefer?

3
Our pre-test beliefs
  • We felt that a majority of the people sampled
    would prefer the real CK One over the knock-off.
    Specifically, we estimated that 75 of the
    opinionated smellers (i.e. ppower .75) would
    prefer the more expensive scent.

4
WaitDartmouth students have cheap taste?!
5
RESULTS
  • Out of our 50 sampled individuals, 37 expressed
    that they could smell a difference. We labeled
    them opinionated smellers. They made up 74 of
    our test population.
  • Of these opinionated smellers, only 37.8
    preferred the original scent, whereas 62.1
    preferred the cheaper version.

6
Confounding Factors
  • Our pre-test was administered in Collis, an area
    that may attract a certain type of person with a
    certain preference. Would results have been
    different if we had conducted our test in Food
    Court?

7
More confounding factors
  • We administered our test Winter Carnival weekend,
    a popular weekend for friends to come up. Thus,
    our population was not exclusively Dartmouth
    students as we had intended
  • We sprayed our perfume sample card every 5
    trials, but the amount we sprayed on the card
    each time may have varied slightly.

8
  • By nature of the season during which we tested
    (i.e. winter), a higher percentage of
    non-smellers may have resulted, due to nasal
    congestion, colds, etc.

9
Given that we did find 37 opinionated smellers in
our 50 person sample group, we think that our
confounding factors are negligible
  • Thus, it seems most likely that our conclusion
    was just WRONG!
  • However, it may just be that people preferred the
    cheap perfume on the perfume tester card..

10
Perfume card versus skin?
  • During our experiment, a number of people
    expressed that their preference of the cheaper
    scent was due to its lower intensity in smell.
  • Perhaps if we had sprayed the perfume on our
    participants skin, it would have smelled
    different and changed our results.

11
What exactly did we do?

12
THE TEST
  • We presented each participant with two paper
    strips, one sprayed with the real CK One perfume
    and the other sprayed with the WalMart knockoff,
    without telling them which was which.
  • We first asked if they could tell a difference in
    the two scents.

13
More protocol
  • If they could tell a difference, we asked which
    scent they preferred.
  • We recorded all results and transferred to an
    Excel spreadsheet.

14
Null Hypothesis
  • That the participants are equally likely to
    prefer the knock-off CK One perfume as they are
    the real one.
  • Specifically, the null hypothesis is that
  • p 0.5, when p is the percent of participants
    who prefer the real CK One, among the
    participants who have a preference.

15
The Alternate Hypothesis
  • That our Collis lunchtime population will prefer
    the expensive real CK One perfume
  • P gt . 5
  • But what we REALLY thought was that a lot more
    than just a majority (i.e. 50) would prefer the
    real CK One!

16
We believed
  • That at least 75 of our opinionated smellers
    would prefer the real CK One.
  • Thus we used p . 75 to estimate the power of
    our test. This means that we are using p .75 to
    estimate how likely it is that we are correct
    about our belief and that our test confirms this
    belief. (Remember, power equals 1 ß)

17
Null and Power Hypotheses
18
Using a 5 significance level
  • We find a Critical Value of 63.5. From our
    results, we chose to use the value of 24 as our
    baseline.

19
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20
POWER!
  • The Power of our test is 94.6.

21
Must we accept our Null Hypothesis?NOOOOOOOOO
  • Given that P K/N where K is the number of
    smellers who preferred the real scent (in our
    case, 14 individuals) and N is the total number
    of Opinionated Smellers (which was 37 people), we
    found that P .378 or 37.8 of a population.
    This falls outside our parameter values of 15-22
    so we must reject the Null Hypothesis TOO (were
    on a roll).

22
We werent exactly in the ballpark
23
Results and Hypotheses
24
Interpretation
  • Dartmouth students prefer cheap perfume!
  • If we had kept our Null Hypothesis the same but
    made our Alternate Hypothesis, We believe people
    prefer cheap perfume, we would have been much
    closer to proving our Alternate Hypothesis.

25
FOR THE FUTURE
  • Test a non-Collisor non-Dartmouth population.
  • Apply the scent directly to skin and omit
    cardboard.
  • Run experiment in a different seasoni.e. when
    nasal congestion is at a lower percentage.
  • Do our experiment over again and check
    differences in results.

26
THE END
  • (robin-amo-clare)
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