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ASSIGNMENT
Course Code :
MS-95
Course Title : Research Methodology for Management Decisions
Assignment No. : MS-95/TMA
/SEM-I/2016
Coverage :
All Blocks
Note: Attempt all the questions and submit
this assignment on or before 30th April, 2016 to the coordinator of your study
center.
Question.
1. Explain briefly why data collection and data analysis should not be
separated at the planning stage of any research project.
Answer:The use of qualitative data in social sciences has recently been
achieving more and more acceptance and popularity. It was not used commonly in the past because
many researchers were not comfortable with the functionality and analysis of
qualitative data. Qualitative data is
data that is expressed in words as opposed to numbers, and it uses less
structured and more open-ended methods of collecting data. However, the appropriate use of this type of
data can add richness to an analysis.
They allow for an issue or question to be probed more in-depth than with
quantitative data. Different techniques
are used both to collect and to analyze qualitative data. It is important to note that “qualitative
methods do not usually fit with the assumptions or requirements of probability
sampling. Unlike sample-survey methods,
qualitative data collection and data analysis are quite labor-intensive, and
usually focus on
Question.
2. What do you understand by stratification of a population? Why is it said
that stratified sampling improve precision?
Answer:In statistics, stratified
sampling is a method of sampling from a population. In statistical surveys, when subpopulations
within an overall population vary, it is advantageous to sample each subpopulation
(stratum) independently. Stratification is the process of dividing members of
the population into homogeneous subgroups before sampling. The strata should be
mutually exclusive: every element in the population must be assigned to
Question.
3. Define Dichotomous data. Mention two reasons which make Guttman scale an
impractical tool for the measurements of attitudes.
Answer:A dichotomy is a partition of a whole (or a set) into two parts (subsets)
that are:
·
Jointly
exhaustive: everything must belong to one part or the other, and
·
Mutually
exclusive: nothing can belong simultaneously to both parts.
Such a partition is also frequently called a
bipartition.
Question.
4. Two different varieties of mushroom were grown on 6 and 7 plots of the same
size. At the end of the crop run, the following quantities of yield were
observed for the two varieties:
Variety
I 16 12 11 13 15 17
Variety
II 11 11 10 15 14 16 10
Using
the Mann-Whitney U test, verify at 0.05 level of significance whether the two varieties
of mushroom produce the same yield.
Answer:Behavior cannot be predicted from a “connectome” because the brain
contains a chemical “map” of neuromodulation superimposed upon its synaptic
connectivity map. Neuromodulation changes how neural circuits process
information in different states, such as hunger or arousal. Here we describe a
genetically based method to map, in an unbiased and brain-wide manner, sites of
neuromodulation under different conditions in the Drosophila brain. This
method, and genetic perturbations, reveal that the well-known
Question.5.Yours
is a consulting organization which undertakes business research studies. A
prospective client visits your organization and wants to know the types of job
your organization undertakes. What sort of pre-presentation handouts would you
prepare before making a presentation to him?
Answer:"It usually takes me more than three weeks to prepare a good
important speech." Most good public presentations, no matter how easy or
spontaneous they look. require diligent preparation, as well as an
understanding of the key principles of presenting — designing the message,
engaging the learner, rehearsing the delivery, and mastering presentation
skills and technologies.
Emergency medicine academicians speak to a
wide range of audiences including colleagues, nurses, paramedics/EMTs, and the
lay public. "Academicians should be eager to give lectures because to
teach is to learn. Presentations are an excellent opportunity for the presenter
to learn, as well as gain feedback and insights from the audience, literally
"road testing" the materials. Speaking before a group is also a great
motivator to be well prepared. (I have a rule that I never give the same speech
twice — i.e., no "canned" presentations
Dear students get fully solved assignments
Send your semester & Specialization name to our
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