Because we have information about the first choice and the second choice that everyone made, we can construct the following contingency table that cross-tabulates the first choice against the second c...Because we have information about the first choice and the second choice that everyone made, we can construct the following contingency table that cross-tabulates the first choice against the second choice. In that situation, what I’m really trying to see if the row totals in cardChoices (i.e., the frequencies for choice_1) are different from the column totals (i.e., the frequencies for choice_2).
Because we have information about the first choice and the second choice that everyone made, we can construct the following contingency table that cross-tabulates the first choice against the second c...Because we have information about the first choice and the second choice that everyone made, we can construct the following contingency table that cross-tabulates the first choice against the second choice. In that situation, what I’m really trying to see if the row totals in cardChoices (i.e., the frequencies for choice_1) are different from the column totals (i.e., the frequencies for choice_2).