6.36 Full body scan, Part II. The table below summarizes

6.36 Full body scan, Part II. The table below summarizes a data set… 6.36 Full body scan, Part II. The table below summarizes a data set we first encountered in Exercise 6.26 regarding views on full-body scans and political affiliation. The differences in each political group may be due to chance. Complete the following computations under the null hypothesis of independence between an individual’s party affiliation and his support of full-body scans. It may be useful to first add on an extra column for row totals before proceeding with the computations. Image transcription textParty Affiliation Republican Democrat Independent Should 264 299 351 Answer Should not 38 55 77 Don’tknow /No answer 16 15 22 Total 318 369 450… Show more d) if we were to run a chi-sq test of independence here, what is the null hypothesis?e) what is the df?f) what is the contribution to the chi-sq test statistic of Democrats who think should?g) if we ran a chi-sq test and failed to reject the null, what is the conclusion?MathStatistics and Probability STAT 221