+## Interpret and discuss
+
+Well, for starters, the model providing a "pooled" estimate of treatment effects while adjusting for age, gender, and study year suggests that the point estimate is "marginally" statistically significant ($p <0.1$) indicating some evidence that the data support the alternative hypothesis (being shown a picture of Michelle Obama causes trick-or-treaters to be more likely to pick up fruit than the control condition). In more concrete terms, the trick-or-treaters shown the Obama picture were, on average, about 26\% more likely to pick up fruit than those exposed to the control (95\% CI: $-4\%~-~+66\%$).[^1] In even more concrete terms, the estimated probability that a 9 year-old girl in 2015 and a 7 year-old boy in 2012 would take fruit increase about 17\% and 19\% respectively on average (from 29\% to 34\% in the case of the 9 year-old and from 21\% to 25\% in the case of the 7 year-old). These findings are sort of remarkable given the simplicity of the intervention and the fairly strong norm that Halloween is all about candy.
+
+[^1]: Remember when I said we would use those odds ratios to interpret the parameter on `obamaTRUE`? Here we are. The parameter value is approximately 1.26, which means that the odds of picking fruit are, on average, 1.26 times as large for a trick-or-treater exposed to the picture of Michelle Obama versus a trick-or-treater in the control condition. In other words, the odds go up by about 26\% ($= \frac{1.26-1}{1}$).
+
+All of that said, the t-test results from Problem set 5 and the "unpooled" results reported in the sub-group analysis point to some potential concerns and limitations. For starters, the fact that the experiment was run iteratively over multiple years and that the sample size grew each year raises some concerns that the study design may not have anticipated the small effect sizes eventually observed and/or was adapted on the fly. This would undermine confidence in some of the test statistics and procedures. Furthermore, because the experiment occurred in sequential years, there's a very real possibility that the significance of a picture of Michelle Obama shifted during that time period and/or the house in question developed a reputation for being "that weird place where they show you pictures of Michelle Obama and offer you fruit." Whatever the case, my confidence in the findings here is not so great and I have some lingering suspicions that the results might not replicate.