Title: Final Exam Review
1Final Exam Review
2Keller 10.13
- A random sample of 50 young adult men (20-30
years old) was sampled. Each person was asked how
many minutes of sports they watch on television
daily. The sample mean was found to be x-bar
64. Suppose that ? 20. Test to determine at the
5 significance level whether there is enough
statistical evidence to infer that the mean
amount of television watched by all young men is
greater than 60 minutes.
3Keller 10.13 - Solution
1.41, p-value P (z gt 1.41) .0793
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that the
mean amount of television watched by all young
adult men is greater than 60 minutes.
4Keller 10.14
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with n 25
1.00, p-value P(z gt 1.00) .1587
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that the
mean amount of television watched by all young
adult men is greater than 60 minutes.
5Keller 10.15
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with n 100
2.00, p-value P(z gt 2.00) .0228
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There
is enough evidence to infer that the mean amount
of television watched by all young adult men is
greater than 60 minutes.
6Keller 10.16
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with ? 10
2.83, p-value P(z gt 2.83) .0023
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There
is enough evidence to infer that the mean amount
of television watched by all young adult men is
greater than 60 minutes.
7Keller 10.17
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with ? 40
.71, p-value P(z gt .71) .2389
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that the
mean amount of television watched by all young
adult men is greater than 60 minutes.
8Keller 10.18
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with x-bar 62
.71, p-value P(z gt .71) .2389
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that the
mean amount of television watched by all young
adult men is greater than 60 minutes.
9Keller 10.19
- Repeat Keller 10.13 with x-bar 68
2.83, p-value P(z gt 2.83) .0023
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There
is enough evidence to infer that the mean amount
of television watched by all young adult men is
greater than 60 minutes.
10Keller 11.28
- The following are a random sample of pipe lengths
cut for a production facility. - Estimate the population mean with 95 confidence
- Test to determine if we can infer at 10
significance level that the population mean is
greater than 20 - What is the required condition of the techniques
used in part a) and b). Use a graphical technique
to check to see if that required condition is
satisfied
11Keller 11.28
Rejection region
b) Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There
is enough evidence to infer that the population
mean is greater than 20.
12Keller 11.28
The population is required to be normal. The
condition appears not to be satisfied.
13Keller 11.41
The following data were drawn from a normal
population 85, 59, 66, 81, 35, 57, 55, 63, 66 At
5 significance, test to determine if there is
enough evidence to conclude that the population
variance is greater than 100.
p-value (Excel) .0275 Rejection region
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There is
enough evidence to infer that the variance is
greater than 100.
14Keller 11.68
In a television commercial, the manufacturer of a
toothpaste claims that more than four out of five
dentist surveyed recommend the ingredients in his
product. To test that claim, a consumer-protection
group randomly samples 400 dentists and asks
each one whether he or she would recommend
toothpaste that contained the ingredients. The
responses are 1 No and 2 Yes. The responses
are found in file XR11-68. At the 5 significance
level, can the consumer group infer that the
claim is true?
15Keller 11.68
p-value P(z gt 1.13) .1292
Rejection region
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that the
claim is true.
16Keller 12.11
After drawing random samples from two normal
populations, a statistician produced the
following statistics. a) Can we infer at 10
significance level that µ1 is less than µ2? b)
Estimate with 95 confidence the difference in
population means
17Keller 12.11
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There is
enough evidence to infer that is less than .
18Keller 12.11
or LCL -180, UCL 22
19Keller 12.12
Repeat with the following new sample standard
deviations
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that is
less than .
20Keller 12.12
LCL -276.41, UCL 118.41
21Keller 12.13
Discuss the effect of increasing the sample
standard deviations.
The t-statistic decreases and the interval
narrows.
22Keller 12.14
Repeat with the following new sample sizes
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There is
enough evidence to infer that is less than .
23Keller 12.14
or LCL -147.09, UCL -10.91
24Keller 12.15
Describe what happens when the sample size
increases.
The t-statistic becomes more negative and the
interval narrows.
25Keller 12.16
Repeat with the following new sample mean
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There is
enough evidence to infer that is less than .
26Keller 12.16
or LCL -214, UCL -12
27Keller 12.17
Repeat with the following new sample mean
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that is
less than .
28Keller 12.17
or LCL -164, UCL 38
29Keller 12.18
Discuss the effect of increasing and decreasing
the sample mean
The farther x-bar1 is from x-bar2 the more
negative the t-statistic. The width of the
interval is not affected by increasing or
decreasing x-bar1
30Keller 12.50
Given the data below, test the following
hypotheses Sample 1 7, 4, 9, 12, 8, 6, 9,
14 Sample 2 10, 7, 13, 18, 4, 8, 21, 20, 5, 8
31Keller 12.50
Given the data below, test the following
hypotheses Sample 1 7, 4, 9, 12, 8, 6, 9,
14 Sample 2 10, 7, 13, 18, 4, 8, 21, 20, 5, 8
Conclusion Reject the null hypothesis. There is
enough evidence to infer that the population
variances differ.
32Keller 12.70
Hismanal is a cold and allergy product that
claims to be the first, once-a-day nondrowsy
alergy medicine. The nondrowsy part of the claim
is based on a clinical experiment in which 1604
patients were given Hismanal and 1109 patients
were given a placebo 7.1 of the first group and
6.4 of the second group reported drowsiness. Do
these results allow us to infer at the 5
significance level that Hismanals claim is false?
33Keller 12.70
p-value (Excel) .2384 Rejection region
Conclusion Do not reject the null hypothesis.
There is not enough evidence to infer that
Hismanal's claim is false.