Morally 'right' actions

13
17
13
8
7
10
10
21
18
17
19
15
15
23
12
12
15
27
19
23
6
2
9
11
5
18
20
24
15
14
11
2
4
4
13
10
13
19
25
14
11
4
14
12
23
19
17
16
17
13
7
9
12
11
30
19
4
11
18
18
24
15
13
12
6
17
27
3
10
7
1
14
22
16
10
2
7
9
5
21
18
17
18
12
15
13
13
15
6
25
13
15
5
28
20
19
14
11
14
4
8
10
7
23
18
24

There are multiple repeats of many values so an un-jittered dot plot superimposes many of its crosses and does not show the distribution of values.

A jittered dot plot separates out the crosses reasonably. However a stacked dot plot is best and, since there is a stack of crosses for each individual value, there is no information lost by 'grouping into classes'.

The data set shows scores from 106 volunteers on a 'motivation scale'. The subjects were presented with 37 situations and could choose one of two possible actions in response to each situation. One of these satisfied short-term gains and the other was a more morally ‘right’ action. The score for each subject is the number of morally right actions chosen (a count between 0 and 37).