answersLogoWhite

0

A large sample size increases the reliability of study results by reducing the impact of random variability and anomalies within the data. It allows for a more accurate representation of the population, leading to more generalizable findings. Additionally, larger samples enhance statistical power, making it easier to detect true effects and relationships. Overall, this minimizes the risk of Type I and Type II errors, thereby strengthening the validity of the conclusions drawn from the study.

User Avatar

AnswerBot

1mo ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about Natural Sciences

Why was Mendel successful when studying the pea plant?

Because of his background in statistics and physics.


What did mendel determine the ratio of purple to white flowers should be in the F2 generation?

For each of the seven characters Medel studied,he found the same 3:1 ratio of plants expressing the contrasting traits in the f2 generation.


Your penis slitley bend up from medel it is normel and make any defrent with this type penis to having sex?

No real difference, but if its bent your more likely to be able to hit your partners g-spot alittle more then a straight one.


In which generation were recessive in all the plants in medel's experiment?

In Mendel's experiments, the recessive traits were observed in the F2 generation. Initially, the traits were not visible in the F1 generation, where only the dominant traits were expressed. However, when the F1 plants were allowed to self-pollinate, the recessive traits reappeared in the F2 generation, typically in a ratio of about 3:1, dominant to recessive.


What did gregor medel call chromosomes?

Mendel did physical studies of the characteristics of pea plants...at about the same time as chromosomes were identified by in 1842 but the word chromosome was coined later. The chromosome's relation to inheritance was only realized by the mid 1880s...and most of the terminology used...did not not come along until the late 1800s to early 1910s. Mendel was doing statistical analyses of plant inheritence and may well have been made aware of the biological mechanisms long after his studies were complete...if at all.