i hate statistics sm

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

null hypothesis (Ho)

"no effect" -the statement being tested in a statistical test.

alternative hypothesis (Ha)

"some effect" -the researcher is trying to gather evidence to support

Based on data taken from airline fares and distances flown, it is determined that the equation of the least-squares regression line is ŷ = 102.50 + 0.65x, where ŷ is the predicted fare and x is the distance, in miles. One of the flights was 350 miles and its residual was -105.00. What was the fare for this flight?

$102.50 $435.00 -$225.00 $330.00

A math club is researching a golf tournament fund-raiser. It will cost $1,000 to host the tournament. If it rains, the club will lose the investment. If it is sunny, it is expected that the club will collect $4,500 from the participants. If the chance of rain is 20%, what is the expected value for the tournament?

$2,600

A real estate agent has 4 homes for sale: A, B, C, and D. Here are the listing prices. Home A: $150,000Home B: $250,000Home C: $190,000Home D: $550,000 The agent wants to randomly select 2 of the 4 homes to show in an open house this coming weekend. This means the agent may show home A and B, A and C, A and D, B and C, B and D, or C and D. If homes A and B are selected, what is the sample mean listing price for this particular selection?

$200,000

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the number of pieces in a brick-building set and the cost of the set. Information was collected from a survey and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 0.08x +1.20, where x represents the number of pieces in a set and ŷ is the predicted price (in dollars) of a set. What is the predicted price of a set that has 500 pieces?

$41.20

A basketball roster is shown in the table. Which variable would be classified as a continuous quantitative variable?

height

A couple is thinking about having 3 children. Assume that each child is equally likely to be a girl or a boy. What is the probability that exactly 2 of the children are girls?

0.375

The owner of an apple orchard knows that the average weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams. Which of the following sample sizes would have the greatest variability?

20

In a test of significance, if all else is held constant, what can be done to increase the power of a test?

D- Increase the sample size or increase the significance level.

The relative frequency table below displays the proportion of colors of cars for sale at a dealership. What proportion of cars are yellow? 0.04 0.1 0.15 0.4

a

his scatterplot shows the study time, in hours, versus test score for 20 students. Complete each statement.

high leverage unusual observation unusual observation

A conference consists of 5 sessions: A, B, C, D, and E. Here are the costs of the sessions. Session A: $50Session B: $50Session C: $100Session D: $150Session E: $200 A participant plans to attend 3 sessions. Here is a list of all possible samples of size 3 sessions from this population of 5 sessions: ABC, ABD, ABE, ACD, ACE, ADE, BCD, BCE, BDE, and CDE. If sessions A, B, and C are selected, what is the sample minimum session cost?

$50

A dealership tracks the correlation between the age of its used cars and asking price for a car. The regression line is ŷ = 12,338 - 930x, where x is the age of the car, in years. If someone was interested in buying a used car that is about 4 years old, what would be a reasonable price for the car?

$8618

There are four blood types, and not all are equally likely to be in blood banks. In a certain blood bank, 49% of donations are Type O blood, 27% of donations are Type A blood, 20% of donations are Type B blood, and 4% of donations are Type AB blood. A person with Type B blood can safely receive blood transfusions of Type O and Type B blood. What is the probability that the 4th donation selected at random can be safely used in a blood transfusion on someone with Type B blood?

(0.31)³(0.69)

A random sample of adults was surveyed about their exercise habits. Of the 100 surveyed, 56 stated they exercise regularly. Which of the following is the 95% confidence interval for p, the proportion of all adults who exercise regularly?

(0.46, 0.66)

A random sample of adults was surveyed about whether they shop online. Of the 90 adults surveyed, 72 stated they shop online. What is the 99% confidence interval for p, the proportion of adults who shop online?

(0.69, 0.91)

71% of the surface of the Earth is covered in water. A random number generator uses latitude and longitude to select a random location on Earth. If such locations are generated, what is the probability that the first of those locations that is over land is on the 8th location?

(0.71)⁷(0.29)

In a certain board game, a 12-sided number cube showing numbers 1-12 is rolled. If three such number cubes are rolled, what is the probability that all three show a number 10 or larger?

(3/12)3

A manufacturing company has 5 vice presidents: Andrew, Beth, Charles, Diane, and Eric. Their regional responsibilities are shown in the table. The president of the company wants to select 2 of the 5 vice presidents randomly to send to a conference. Which of the following gives a correct list of all possible samples of size 2 selected from this population of 5 vice presidents without replacement?

(Andrew, Beth), (Andrew, Charles), (Andrew, Diane), (Andrew, Eric), (Beth, Charles), (Beth, Diane), (Beth, Eric), (Charles, Diane), (Charles, Eric), (Diane, Eric)

A store manager wanted to see the relationship between the number of computers sold, x, and store profit, y, on a daily basis. The regression line is ŷ = -150 + 24x, where x is the number of computers sold for the day. What is the predicted store profit if 0 computers are sold for the day?

-$150

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the number of pieces in a building-brick set and the cost of the set. The researchers collected information from a survey and used it to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 0.08x + 1.20, where x represents the number of pieces in a set and ŷ is the predicted price (in dollars) of the set. What is the predicted price of a set that has 2,520 pieces?

-$202.80 $2,017.20 $3,024.08 $31,485

A statistics student wants to determine if there is a relationship between a student's number of absences, x, and their grade point average (GPA), y. The given data lists the number of absences and GPAs for 15 randomly selected students. Using technology, the slope of the least-squares regression line is

-0.10, which means for each additional absence, the GPA is predicted to decrease by 0.10 points.

Agriculturists in a certain state claim that 43% of the residents in the northern portion of the state prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas, while 59% of the residents in the southern portion of the state prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas. Suppose random samples of 33 northerners and 41 southerners are selected. Let and be the sample proportions of northern and southern residents of this state, respectively, who would prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas. Which of the following is the mean of the sampling distribution of PN-PS?

-0.16

Alex's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.28 minutes and a standard deviation of 0.38 seconds. Chris's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.45 seconds and a standard deviation of 0.2 seconds. Ten of Alex's times and 15 of Chris's times are randomly selected. Let represent the difference in the mean times for Alex and Chris. Which of the following represents the mean of the sampling distribution for xa-xc?

-0.17

The number of pieces of cat food in a one-cup scoop is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 344 pieces and a standard deviation of 16 pieces. If a random sample of 28 scoops of cat food is selected, what is the probability that the mean number of pieces will be more than 350 pieces?

0.0236

The arm span and foot length were measured (in centimeters) for each of the 19 students in a statistics class and displayed in the scatterplot. An analysis was completed and the computer output is shown. PredictorCoefSE Coeft-ratiopConstant-7.6112.5672.9650.046Arm span0.1860.0355.3770.000 S = 1.61R-Sq = 63.0%R-Sq(Adj) = 62.7% Using the computer output, what is the correlation?

-0.630 0.649 0.794 0.806

A snack-size bag of carrots has a mean weight of 1.75 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.1 ounce. Kendra bought a snack-size bag of carrots to measure and found that it weighed 1.68 ounces. What is the z-score for the snack-size bag of carrots that Kendra measured?

-0.70

The scatterplot shows the number of bacteria in a petri dish for different temperatures. The least-squares regression equation is ŷ= 25 - 1.5x. Calculate and interpret the residual at a temperature of 6ºF.

-1 1 less

Two machines, X and Y, produce earbuds. Let X represent the diameter of an earbud produced by machine X, and let Y represent the diameter of an earbud produced by machine Y. X has a mean of 14 mm with a standard deviation of 0.6 mm, and Y has a mean of 15.2 mm with a standard deviation of 0.2 mm. Which answer choice correctly calculates and interprets the mean of the difference, D = X - Y?

-1.2; earbud manufacturers can expect the difference in the diameter of earbuds produced from machines X and Y, on average, to be -1.2 mm.

The least-squares regression equation ŷ = 100 + 25x can be used to predict the amount of money raised at a fundraiser when x donors donated money. Suppose $3,725 was raised at a fundraiser with 150 donors. Calculate and interpret the residual for this fundraiser with 150 donors.

-125 125 less negative overestimated

A choir director collected data about the number of members in the choir for the last 20 years. The mean number of choir members is 52.68 with a standard deviation of 2.35. This year. The choir has 46 members. The choir director wants to find and interpret the z-score for 46 choir members. Complete the statements about the z-score and its interpretation. The z-score for 46 choir members is about

-2.843 2.843 below fewer

A sports statistician was interested in the relationship between game attendance (in thousands) and the number of wins for baseball teams. Information was collected on several teams and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 4.9x + 15.2, where x represents the attendance (in thousands) and ŷ is the predicted number of wins. What is the predicted number of wins for a team that has an attendance of 2,100?

-25.49 wins 31.92 wins 36.82 wins 10,305.2 wins

A sports analyst determines that the number of points scored in a basketball game is related to the number of shots taken during the game. The least-squares regression line is ŷ = 5.0 + 1.2x, where ŷ is the predicted number of points scored and x is the number of shots taken. In one game, a team takes 50 shots and scores 75 points. What is the residual for this team during this game?

-33 5 =10 65

A sports statistician was interested in the relationship between game attendance (in thousands) and the number of wins for baseball teams. Information was collected on several teams and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 4.9x + 15.2, where x represents attendance (in thousands) and ŷ is the predicted number of wins. Which statement best describes the meaning of the slope of the regression line?

-For each increase in attendance by 1,000, the predicted number of wins increases by 4.9. For each increase in attendance by 1,000, the predicted number of wins increases by 15.2. For each increase in the number of wins by 1, the predicted attendance increases by 4,900. For each increase in the number of wins by 1, the predicted attendance increases by 15,200.

A new cream was developed to reduce the irritation caused by poison ivy. To test the effectiveness, researchers placed an ad online asking for volunteers to participate in the study, and 100 subjects replied. They are informed that one group will receive a new cream and the other group will receive a cream with no active ingredient. The researchers believe that sun exposure may affect the cream's effectiveness. The subjects are then asked about their outdoor activities, and 42 of the subjects state they spend more than 50% of their day outside. All subjects are exposed to poison ivy and given their cream. They are asked to return in three days and report their level of irritation. Which of the following describes a randomized block design?

-The subjects are grouped based on their outdoor activity. The 42 subjects are randomly assigned to the two treatment groups. The remaining 58 subjects are also randomly assigned to the two treatment groups. The subjects are numbered 1-100, and these numbers are entered into a random number generator. Fifty numbers, ignoring repeats, are generated and these subjects receive the new cream. The remaining 50 receive the inactive cream. The subjects are paired based on similar age. Two marbles, one red and one blue, are placed in a bag and mixed. If the first subject picks a red marble, then that subject will receive the new cream and the other subject will receive the inactive cream. If it is blue, then the opposite will occur. This is done for all 50 pairs. The subjects are grouped based on their outdoor activity. The researchers flip a coin and if it lands on heads, then the group with the most sun exposure will receive the new cream and the other group will receive the inactive cream. If the coin lands on tails, then the group with the most sun exposure will receive the inactive cream and the other group will receive the new cream.

In a large urban high school, 68% of the students take public transportation to and from school. Annette takes a random sample of 75 students from this school. What is the probability that more than 70% of the students in the sample take public transportation to and from school?

0.356

A shoe company wants to test an updated model of a running shoe on its wear after one month of running. They recruit 50 people who run on a regular basis to participate in the study. Twenty-five runners will receive a pair of the new model and the remaining 25 will receive a pair of the current model. After one month, the wear on the shoes will be determined using the depth of the tread and the flexibility of the toe box. The wear between the new and current models will then be compared. Which of the following describes a completely randomized design for this experiment?

-The subjects are numbered 1-50 and these numbers are put into a random number generator. The first 25 random numbers, ignoring repeats, represent the subjects assigned to the new model group. The remaining 25 subjects will wear the current model. The subjects' names are written on equal-sized slips of paper and placed into a hat. A researcher then reaches in and pulls out 25 slips of paper. These subjects are assigned to the new model group. The remaining 25 subjects will be assigned to the current model group. The 50 subjects are paired based on running ability. The fastest two runners are paired together, the next fastest, etc. For each pair of runners, the researcher will flip a coin. If the coin lands on heads, the first runner will receive the new model and the second runner will receive the original model. The 50 subjects are grouped based on running ability. Twenty runners classify themselves as competitive runners and the remaining 30 classify themselves as recreational runners. For the competitive group, the runners' names are written on equal-sized slips of paper and placed into a hat. The slips are shuffled, and the first 10 runners wear the new model and the other 10 wear the current model. The same procedure is used to assign the shoes to the recreational group.

To investigate the influence of distracted driving, 13 volunteers were asked to participate in a study involving a driving simulator. The participants drove at a safe speed but were told to stop the car at a random moment during the simulation. The scatterplot shows the reaction time and the simulated car's stopping distance (in feet) for each volunteer. The value of r for the scatterplot is 0.935. How would the correlation change if the stopping distances were recorded in meters, rather than feet?

-The value of the correlation coefficient would not change. Since the points would be more spread out, the value of the correlation coefficient would decrease. Since the number of meters would be less than the number of feet, the value of the correlation coefficient would increase. Since the number of meters would be less than the number of feet, the value of the correlation coefficient would decrease.

A therapist wants to study the effects of yoga and meditation on stress relief. She has 60 volunteers who experience varying levels of stress. Half of the participants will be assigned to practice yoga for one month and the other half will practice meditation. Before the experiment begins, all of the participants will be asked to rate their stress levels on a scale from 0 to 10, with 0 representing "no stress" and 10 representing "highest level of stress." At the end of one month, the participants will be asked to rate their stress level again. The differences in stress levels will be compared. Which of the following describes a completely randomized design for this experiment?

-The volunteers' names are all placed on equal-sized slips of paper and these slips are put into a hat. The therapist draws 30 slips of paper and the corresponding volunteers are placed into the yoga group. The remaining 30 volunteers are placed in the meditation group. After one month, the stress levels between the two groups are measured and compared. Volunteers are put together based on stress level in groups of two. For each group of two, a coin is flipped and if it is heads, then the first person is placed in the yoga group, and if it is tails, then the first person is placed in the meditation group. The other person will be placed in the other group. After one month, the stress levels between the two participants are measured and compared. The volunteers' names are all placed on equal-sized slips of paper and these slips are put into a hat. After the hat is shaken, a slip of paper is drawn without replacement and the corresponding volunteer is placed in the yoga group. This is repeated until the yoga group has 30 volunteers. The remaining 30 volunteers are placed in the meditation group. After one month, the stress levels between the two groups are measured and compared. The volunteers are grouped based on their current stress level. The 30 volunteers with the highest level of reported stress are placed in one group and the remaining 30 volunteers are placed in another group. The therapist flips a coin and if it lands on heads, then the group with the highest stress levels will receive the yoga treatment. If it lands on tails, then this group will receive the meditation treatment. After one month, the stress levels will be compared between the two groups.

A tire company wants to determine if tires made with a new type of tread will last longer than the tires made with the original type of tread. The company has access to 24 different vehicles. The vehicles will be driven for one year and the depth of the remaining tread will be measured. The average depth for the new type of tread will be compared to the average depth of the original type of tread. Which of the following describes a randomized block design for this experiment?

-There are six vehicles of each vehicle type: sedan, SUV, minivan, and truck. For each type, three vehicles will be randomly selected to receive tires with the new tread and the other three vehicles will receive tires with the original tread. Each vehicle is numbered 1-24, and these numbers are put into a random number generator. The first 12 unique numbers represent the vehicles that will receive the tires with the new tread. The remaining 12 vehicles will receive the tires with the original tread. The vehicles will be put in groups of two based on the size of the vehicle, with the largest two put together, the next largest two, etc. For each of the 12 pairs, the largest vehicle will get tires with the original type of tread and the other vehicle in the pair will get the new type of tread. There are six vehicles of each vehicle type: sedan, SUV, minivan, and truck. Each vehicle type is numbered 1-4, and these numbers are entered into a random number generator. The first two unique numbers selected will represent the group of vehicles that will receive tires with the new type of tread. The remaining 2 groups will receive tires with the original tread.

A biology student wants to determine if using a fertilizer would help promote the growth of new babies in spider plants. The student chooses 100 baby spider plants to be used in the study. They all are potted in the same amount and type of soil, given the same amount of water, and exposed to the same amount of light. Half of the plants are randomly assigned to the group that receives fertilizer every three months and the remaining plants are assigned to the group that does not receive fertilizer. After one year, the shoots are counted for each plant. The average number of shoots for the plants receiving fertilizer is compared with the average number of shoots for the plants that did not receive fertilizer. Is this a completely randomized design?

-Yes, the plants were randomly assigned each treatment. Yes, the plants received the same amount of soil, water, and light. No, only spider plants were used. No, the plants did not all receive the same treatment.

Lynnetta gets paid weekly for completing household chores. The amount of money she earns for doing dishes, D, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of $53 and a standard deviation of $3.60. The amount of money she earns for doing laundry, L, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of $47 and a standard deviation of $4.10. Assume that D and L are independent random variables. What is the probability that Lynnetta will earn more than $110 in a randomly selected week?

0.034

At a carnival game, the chance of winning a prize is 0.45. Elijah plays the game 5 times. What is the probability that he wins 1 prize in 5 games?

0.04

A tire company wants to determine if tires made with a new type of tread will last longer than tires made with the original type of tread. The company decides to put tires with the new tread on 10 different vehicles and tires with the original tread on 10 different vehicles. "New" is written on one slip of paper and "Original" is written on another slip of paper. The two slips are placed in a bag and thoroughly mixed. A vehicle is selected and a slip is drawn. The corresponding tread of tires is assigned to the vehicle. The slip is put back into the bag and mixed. The next vehicle is selected and a slip is drawn. The corresponding tread is assigned to the vehicle. This procedure continues until all 20 vehicles have been assigned tires of the new or original types of tread. Does this procedure describe a completely randomized design for this experiment?

-Yes, the tires are randomly assigned to each vehicle. Yes, there are two treatments, new and original treads. No, even though randomness is used, the procedure does not ensure that an equal number of vehicles are in both groups. No, the company did not use 20 of the same type of vehicle to receive both treatments, the new and original treads.

summarize the t-test for matched pairs

-find the differences between the measurements (find "d") -apply all other t procedures

what can hinder interference in practice?

-practical problems (nonresponse, dropouts) -not using random data

what do we do when the population standard deviation (σ) is unknown?

-use the t-statistic -use table C

what do we conclude if the p-value is larger than the significance level(α)

-we can accept the null hypothesis -the data are not statistically significant

what do we conclude if the p-value is the same or smaller than the significance level(α)

-we can reject the null hypothesis -the data are statistically significant at level α

In bags of Happy Trail Mix, the number of raisins is skewed left with a mean of 33.6 and a standard deviation of 8.4, while in bags of a generic trail mix, the number of raisins is skewed right with a mean of 28.8 and a standard deviation of 12.7. What is the probability in a sample of 17 randomly selected Happy Trail Mix bags and a sample of 17 randomly selected generic bags that the mean number of raisins in the Happy Trail Mix is more than the mean number of raisins in the generic mix?

.9032

At a carnival, a customer notices that a prize wheel has 5 equal parts, one of which is labeled "winner." She would like to conduct a simulation to determine how many spins it would take for the wheel to land on "winner." She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0, 1 = winner 2-9 = not a winner Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1 and starting each new trial right after the previous trial, carry out 5 trials of this simulation. What proportion of the 5 trials takes more than 10 spins to win a prize?

0

The graph shows the number of states and Washington, DC, within each range of electoral votes for the 2020 presidential election. What is the variability of electoral votes that states will have for the 2020 presidential election?

0 to 21 electoral votes

Tennis balls must have a high rebound, or bounce, that is approved by the International Tennis Federation. Rebound is measured by dropping a ball from a height of 100 inches and measuring how high it bounces. Approved balls must bounce back up 53 to 58 inches. A tennis coach tested 50 tennis balls and found that the mean bounce was 56.2 inches and the standard deviation was 1.8 inches. The z-score of a ball that bounces 56.2 inches is - . This ball has a bounce that is - the mean.

0.0 equal to

The number of turns of a pencil sharpener needed to sharpen a brand W pencil is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 4.6 and a standard deviation of 0.67. The number of turns needed to sharpen a brand H pencil is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 5.2 and a standard deviation of 0.33. If 30 pencils of each brand are randomly selected and sharpened, what is the probability that the brand W pencils will have a higher mean number of turns needed to sharpen than brand H?

0.0005

The times a musician spends performing a rock song and a country song are approximately Normally distributed. The rock song has a mean time of 133 seconds with a standard deviation of 3.5 seconds, and the country song has a mean time of 126 seconds with a standard deviation of 3.3 seconds. If the musician randomly selects 4 times the rock song is played and 3 times the country song is played, what is the probability that the mean time for the rock song is less than the mean time for the country song?

0.0034

A course for a snail race has times that are skewed right with a mean of 5.18 minutes and a standard deviation of 2.34 minutes. If a random sample of 38 snails is selected, what is the probability that the mean race time is less than 4.3 minutes?

0.0102

The number of pieces of dog food in a one-cup scoop is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 205 pieces and a standard deviation of 9.2 pieces. If a random sample of 15 scoops of dog food is selected, what is the probability that the mean number of pieces of food will be less than 200 pieces?

0.0177

A group of students is writing a phone message app to provide better word suggestions based on the context of the word and the words the person used in the past. They will earn an A on the project if their teacher is convinced that their program suggests the correct word at least 54% of the time. The current success rate for this app is 54%. The teacher randomly selects 100 words and finds that the students' program correctly suggests 64 of the words. To determine if this data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of correct words is more than 54%, 150 trials of a simulation are conducted. The results are shown in the dotplot. The teacher is testing the hypotheses: H0: p = 54% and Ha: p > 54%, where p = the true proportion of words the app will correctly predict. Based on the results of the simulation, what is the estimate of the P-value of the test?

0.02

multiple analyses

if you actually run the test many times, there is a low probability that the confidence interval will actually capture the true mean

Hans has two route options to drive to work. When he travels Hampton Road, the distribution of times is approximately Normal with a mean of 23.9 minutes and a standard deviation of 3.1 minutes. When Hans travels Route 8, the distribution of times is approximately Normal with a mean of 20.8 minutes and a standard deviation of 5.4 minutes. Hans randomly selects 11 times he drove Hampton Road and 11 different times that he drove Route 8. What is the probability the mean time of the Hampton Road trips will be less than the mean of the Route 8 trips?

0.0493

A commuter train is late to a station 5% of the time. Last week, the train was late on 2 of the 7 days. If the train being late can be considered a random event, what is the probability that the train would be late 2 times in 7 days?

0.050

A large company boasts in their promotional literature that 74% of their employees have college degrees. Assume this claim is true. What is the probability that if people are selected at random from this company, that the first person to have a college degree is the 3rd person selected?

0.0500

A jar contains 11 red marbles, 12 blue marbles, and 6 white marbles. Four marbles from this jar are selected, with each marble being replaced after each selection. What is the probability that the first red marble chosen is on the 5th selection?

0.0563

Devon's tennis coach says that 72% of Devon's serves are good serves. Devon thinks he has a higher proportion of good serves. To test this, 50 of his serves are randomly selected and 42 of them are good. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of Devon's serves that are good is greater than 72%, 100 trials of a simulation are conducted. Devon's hypotheses are: H0: p = 72% and Ha: p > 72%, where p = the true proportion of Devon's serves that are good. Based on the results of the simulation, what is the estimate of the P-value of the test?

0.06

A medical device company knows that the percentage of patients experiencing injection-site reactions with the current needle is 11%.What is the probability that an injection-site reaction occurs for the first time on the 6th patient of the day?

0.0614

At a certain pizzeria, it is known that 12% of orders are for extra-large pizzas. What is the probability that the 6th pizza ordered is the first extra-large pizza?

0.0633

Hannah has a chicken coop with six hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a random day. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the probability that the hens lay a total of two eggs?

0.07

The owner of an apple orchard has learned from previous experience that, on average, 5% of the harvested apples have blemishes. The owner randomly selects 10 apples from this year's harvest. What is the probability that 2 of the apples have blemishes?

0.07

The weight of panda bears, P, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 185 pounds and a standard deviation of 12.3 pounds. The weight of koala bears, K, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 21.5 pounds and a standard deviation of 4.8 pounds. Suppose a zookeeper randomly chooses a panda and a koala bear, where P and K are independent random variables. What is the probability that the total weight for the two animals is 225 pounds or more?

0.081

A fair six-sided number cube is rolled 60 times. What is the probability that fewer than 10% of the rolls are a five?

0.082

A computer technician notes that 40% of computers fail because of the hard drive. If he repairs many computers a day, what is the probability that the first computer that has failed due to the hard drive is his 4th computer of the day?

0.0864

The total number of forks dropped by customers per day at a busy restaurant is multimodal with a mean of 24.5 and a standard deviation of 3.3. If a random sample of 80 days is selected, what is the probability that the mean number of forks dropped during those days will be more than 25?

0.088

The table shows the number of cars sold per day at a dealership during a promotional sale. What is the equation of the least-squares regression line, where is the predicted number of cars sold and xis the day? Round each coefficient or constant to the nearest tenth.

0.1 1.8

A jar contains 11 red marbles, 12 blue marbles, and 6 white marbles. Four marbles from this jar are selected, with each marble being replaced after each selection. What is the probability that the first white marble chosen is on the 4th selection?

0.1032

Alex's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.28 minutes and a standard deviation of 0.38 seconds. Chris's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.45 seconds and a standard deviation of 0.2 seconds. Ten of Alex's times and 15 of Chris's times are randomly selected. Let represent the difference in the mean times for Alex and Chris. Which of the following represents the standard deviation of the sampling distribution for ?

0.13

At a manufacturing plant, it is known that 8% of the computer chips produced are defective. A random sample of 20 chips is taken. What is the probability that 3 of those chips are defective?

0.14

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase. The owner determines the probabilities based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the probability that a randomly selected purchase has less than two tickets?

0.17

A shipping company claims that 90% of its packages are delivered on time. Jenny noticed that out of the last 10 packages shipped, 2 were late. What is the probability that 2 out of 10 randomly selected shipments would be late?

0.19

At West High School, 10% of the students participate in sports. A student wants to simulate the act of randomly selecting 20 students and counting the number of students in the sample who participate in sports. The student assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0 = student participates in sports 1-9 = student does not participate in sports Here is a portion of a random number table. In the first trial, line 1, two of the 20 digits are zeros, meaning that two of the 20 selected students participate in sports. Starting at line 2 and using a new line for each trial, carry out 4 more trials to determine the number of students who participate in sports in random samples of size 20. In what proportion of all 5 trials do we find that 0 students participate in sports?

0.2

At a local coffee shop, the manager has determined that 56% of drink orders are for specialty espresso drinks and 44% are for plain coffee. The manager also noted that 40% of customers order food. For customers who purchase the specialty espresso drinks, 35% also purchase a food item, and for customers who purchase plain coffee, 30% also purchase a food item. What is the probability that a randomly chosen customer will purchase a specialty espresso drink and a food item?

0.20

Renee and Thomas live at the beach and collect seashells. The number of shells Renee collects on any given day, R, is approximately Normal with a mean of 58.2 shells and a standard deviation of 12.8 shells. The number of shells Thomas collects on any given day, T, is approximately Normal with a mean of 47.9 shells and a standard deviation of 11.5 shells. Assume the two random variables are independent of each other. What is the probability that on a randomly selected day the total number of shells collected by Renee and Thomas is 120 or more?

0.209

One professional basketball player typically attempts eight free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of eight. The distribution for X is shown in the table. What is the probability that the basketball player will make six free throws out of the eight attempts?

0.21

At a certain high school, 38% of freshmen and 31% of sophomores walk to school. Suppose that random samples of 40 freshmen and 45 sophomores are chosen. Let S = the proportion of sophomores who walk to school and F = the proportion of freshmen who walk to school. What is the probability that the proportion of sophomores who walk to school is greater than the proportion of freshmen?

0.248

On any given day, 34% of sales at Ruby's jewelry store are from necklaces, while 28% of sales at Nugget Jewels are from necklaces. Suppose Ruby's has 50 customers and Nugget Jewels has 60 customers on a randomly selected day. Let R = the proportion of sales that are from necklaces at Ruby's and N = the proportion of sales that are from necklaces at Nugget Jewels. What is the probability that the proportion of sales from necklaces at Ruby's will be less than the proportion of sales from necklaces at Nugget Jewels?

0.250

In a large local high school, 19% of freshmen have had their wisdom teeth removed and 24% of seniors have had their wisdom teeth removed. Suppose that a random sample of 60 freshmen and 50 seniors is selected. Let F = the proportion of freshmen who have had their wisdom teeth removed and S = the proportion of seniors who have had their wisdom teeth removed. What is the probability that the proportion of freshmen who have had their wisdom teeth removed is greater than the proportion of seniors?

0.263

A business has an opportunity to invest $35,000. If the investment is a success, the business earns a profit of $150,000. Otherwise, the investment will result in a total loss of all monies. If the investment has 0.27 chance of success, which equation correctly models the expected value of this investment?

0.27(150,000) + 0.73(-35,000) = E(X)

In a beach town, 13% of the residents own boats. A random sample of 100 residents was selected. What is the probability that less than 11% of the residents in the sample own boats?

0.276

A quarterback's pass-completion percentage is 70%. Eight of his passes are randomly selected. What is the probability that 6 of them were successful passes?

0.30

The grade distribution for students in the introductory statistics class at a local community college are displayed in the table. In this table, A = 4, B = 3, etc. Let X represent the grade for a randomly selected student. What is the probability that a randomly selected student got a B?

0.31

One professional basketball player typically attempts eight free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of eight. The distribution for X is shown in the table. What is the probability that the basketball player will make at least six free throws out of the eight attempts?

0.32

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let X represent the score on a randomly selected exam. The distribution of scores for one subject's standardized test is given in the table. What is the probability of earning a score lower than 3?

0.38

Ricardo and Tammy practice putting golf balls. Ricardo makes 47% of his putts and Tammy makes 51% of her putts. Suppose that Ricardo attempts 25 putts and Tammy attempts 30 putts. Let R = the proportion of putts Ricardo makes and T = the proportion of putts Tammy makes. What is the probability that Ricardo makes a higher proportion of putts than Tammy?

0.384

A placekicker for a football team makes field goals 85% of the time when kicking from the 20-yard line. Assuming that field goal attempts can be considered random events, what is the probability that the placekicker will make 4 of his next 5 attempts from the 20-yard line?

0.39

A large hotel has five elevators. On any given day, there is an 8% chance that one elevator is broken The elevators operate independently of one another. The Robertsons are staying in this hotel for five days. Let X represent the number of days one elevator is broken during their stay. What are the mean and standard deviation of X?

0.4, 0.61

Carol and Diane are axe throwers. Carol hits the board on 44% of her throws, while Diane hits the board on 42% of her throws. Suppose that Carol throws 25 axes at the board and Diane throws 28. Let C = the proportion of axes that hit the board when Carol throws and D = the proportion of axes that hit the board when Diane throws. What is the probability that Diane's proportion of axes hitting the board is higher than Carol's?

0.442

One study of 91 bald eagle eggs found that the eggs had a mean length of 73.6 millimeters and standard deviation of 2.9 millimeters. One of the bald eagle eggs found was 74.9 millimeters long. Which is closest to the z-score for the egg?

0.45

The owner of a used car dealership is trying to determine if there is a relationship between the price of a used car and the number of miles it has been driven. The owner collects data for 25 cars of the same model with different mileage and determines each car's price using a used car website. The analysis is given in the computer output. Using the computer output, what is the value of the coefficient of determination?

0.46 -0.68 0.70 0.82

In an urban area, 31% of dog owners pay for someone to walk their dogs. Morgan asks a random sample of 50 dog owners in this urban area if they pay for someone to walk their dog. What is the probability that more than 30% of the owners in the sample pay for someone to walk their dog?

0.561

A placekicker for a football team makes field goals 55% of the time when kicking from the 35-yard line. Assume that field goal attempts can be considered random events. Using the table, what is the probability that the placekicker will make at least 3 of his next 5 attempts from the 35-yard line?

0.60

The heights of five-year-olds are Normally distributed with a mean of 42.5 inches and a standard deviation of 2.5 inches. A random sample of 16 five-year-olds is taken and the mean height is recorded. What would be the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of all possible samples of size 16?

0.63

Among the senior class at a high school, 55% of Ms. Keating's students plan on majoring in a branch of STEM, while 49% of Ms. Lewis's students plan on majoring in a branch of STEM. Suppose Ms. Keating chooses 25 of her students at random and Ms. Lewis chooses 23 of her students at random. Since nKpK, nK (1 - pK) and nLpL, nL (1 - pL) are all greater than 10, the Normal condition is met. Let K = the proportion of Ms. Keating's students from the sample who plan on majoring in a branch of STEM, and let L = the proportion of Ms. Lewis's students from the sample who plan on majoring in a branch of STEM. What is the probability that the proportion of students who plan on majoring in a branch of STEM is greater for Ms. Keating?

0.662

A student decides to spin a dime and determine the proportion of times it lands on heads. The student spins the dime 25 times and records that it lands on heads 17 times. Let p = the true proportion of times the dime would land on heads when spun. If the true proportion is 0.5, which of the following sample proportions is the least likely to occur?

0.7

The table shows how surveyed drivers obtained their current vehicle and how they plan to get their next vehicle. What proportion of the drivers who said they currently lease a vehicle plan to lease their next vehicle?

0.72

Driving instructors Mr. Adams and Mr. Bateman teach class independently of each other. Among Mr. Adams's students, 68% pass the driving test on the first try, while 74% of Mr. Bateman's students pass the driving test on the first try. Suppose there are 40 students in Mr. Adams's class and 50 students in Mr. Bateman's class. Let A = the proportion of students who pass the driving test on the first try from Mr. Adams's class and B = the proportion of students who pass the driving test on the first try from Mr. Bateman's class. What is the probability that Mr. Bateman's class has more students who pass on the first try?

0.734

You are challenged to a lucky draw game. If you draw a face card (K, Q, J) from a standard deck of cards, you earn 10 points. If you draw any other card, you lose 2 points. What is the expected value of a draw?

0.77

A spinner with four equal sectors labeled "purple," "blue," "orange," and "green" is spun 45 times. What is the probability that the spinner will land on "purple" in fewer than 20% of the spins?

0.779

A statistics teacher has a large container of beads that she says contains 60% blue beads. A student randomly selects 50 beads. Let p = the true proportion of blue beads in the container. If the true proportion of blue beads is 0.60, which value of p is least likely to occur?

0.80

A certain standardized test measures students' knowledge in English and math. The English and math scores for 10 randomly selected students are given in the table. Using technology, what is the value of r2?

0.83

The grade distribution for students in the introductory statistics class at a local community college are displayed in the table. In this table, A = 4, B = 3, etc. Let X represent the grade for a randomly selected student. What is the probability that a randomly selected student earned a C or better?

0.91

Latisha owns two spas, one in Pine township and the other in Adams township. Each spa offers a 30-minute face, head, and neck massage to reduce muscle tension. However, therapists first ask each patient questions about their type of tension and stop about five minutes before the end of the 30 minutes to have time to prepare for the next patient. The number of minutes each therapist massages the patients at both spas is approximately Normally distributed, with the Pine spa having a mean of 22.6 minutes and a standard deviation of 1.7 minutes and the Adams spa having a mean of 21.0 minutes and a standard deviation of 2.8 minutes. If Latisha randomly selects 8 massage times from Pine and 9 from Adams, what is the probability that the mean time for Pine is longer than the mean time for Adams?

0.9252

Claire flips a coin 4 times. Using the table, what is the probability that the coin will show tails at least once?

0.94

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase and makes a probability distribution based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the standard deviation of the distribution?

0.95

The table shows the number of kilograms a newborn pig weighs during its first week. What is the equation of the least-squares regression line, where is the predicted weight and x is the day? Round each coefficient or constant to the nearest hundredth.

0.96 0.18

Chris makes a smoothie for breakfast every day. When he makes smoothies with bananas, the distribution of calories is skewed right with a mean of 248.6 and a standard deviation of 39.1. His berry smoothies have a distribution of calories that is approximately Normal with a mean of 279.1 calories and a standard deviation of 60.8. Random samples of 35 of each type of smoothie are selected. What is the probability of the banana smoothies having fewer mean calories than the berry smoothies?

0.9937

The probability that a mature hen will lay an egg on a given day is 0.80. Hannah has 6 hens. Using the table, what is the probability that at least 2 of the hens will lay eggs on a given day?

0.998

The distribution of the number of blocks a young child can stack before their tower falls is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 12.7 blocks and a standard deviation of 1.4 blocks. If 6 of the child's towers are randomly selected, what is the probability that the mean number of blocks is more than 11 blocks?

0.9985

A farmer sows 100 seeds of a new type of corn and wants to quickly determine the yield, or total number of ears of corn, for the crop when it has matured. He decides to take a simple random sample of the crop. Which of the following correctly labels the population?

00-99

A candy manufacturer is testing new brands of sugar and needs to assign 150 recipes to two treatment groups. A table of random digits will be used to generate the sample. Select the appropriate way to number the experimental units.

000-149

A school principal wants to conduct a survey of student electronic use in her high school. She wants to select an SRS of 50 from the 690 students in the school using a random number table. Which of the following are correct methods for labeling the population? Check all that apply.

000-689 001-690

A greenhouse owner wants to test the effectiveness of a new fertilizer on African violets. She has 60 violet seedlings that were grown for 8 weeks. She wants to test the new fertilizer on 10 of the plants, and decides to use a random number table to select a simple random sample. Which of the following correctly labels the population of violets?

01-60

Several members of a running club would like to survey the rest of the members to determine which 5K races the club should enter. They decide to use a random number table to sample 10 of the 78 members. Which of the following correctly labels the population?

01-78

Based upon historical data, it is known that 8% of 12-egg cartons contain at least one broken egg. A grocery store manager would like to carry out a simulation to estimate the number of cartons, in a sample of 10, that would contain at least one broken egg. She assigns the digits to the outcomes: 01-08 = carton contains a broken egg 09-99, 00 = carton does not contain a broken egg Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many cartons in this random sample of 10 cartons contain at least one broken egg?

1

A real estate company wanted to see the relationship between home prices and square footage of homes for sale. The regression line is ŷ = -802,456 + 144x, where x is the square footage of a home.

1 144

A politician estimates that 61% of his constituents will vote for him in the coming election. How many constituents are required for a random sample to obtain a margin of error of at most 0.03 with 95% confidence?

1,016

how to calculate the p-values for each of the t tests

1. For Ha:μ≠μo, calculate 2P(T>|n|) 2. For Ha:μ>μo, calculate P(T>t) 3. For Ha:μ<μo, calculate P(T<t)

What are the three basic types of hypothesis tests for the population mean(μ)? -one-sided or two-sided?

1. Ho:μ=μo vs. Ha:μ>μo (one-sided) 2. Ho:μ=μo vs. Ha:μ<μo (one-sided) 3. Ho:μ=μo vs. Ha:μ≠μo (two-sided)

summarize how to use hypothesis tests on the population mean (μ)

1. State H0 and Ha 2. Calculate the test statistic z = x - population mean 0) / (standard deviation/square root of n) 3. Calculate the p-value for the test. 4. Make a decision based on the p-value. If p-value is less then or equal to the decisive value, we reject H0 and accept Ha. If p-value is greater than the decisive value, we do not reject H0.

summarize the t-test

1. state Ho vs. Ha 2. decide on one-sided or two-sided test 3. choose significance level 4. calculate t and its degrees of freedom 5. use table C to find the area under the curve 6. state p-value and interpret result

what are the 2 circumstances where only a very large p-value is convincing evidence against Ho

1. the Ho has been believed for years 2. if rejecting Ho means making a costly changeover

In a statistics class, students were asked how many siblings they have. Their responses are shown. 2, 3, 1, 3, 5, 3, 3, 3, 6, 3, 5, 0, 3 What is the z-score for the student with five siblings?

1.19

A certain standardized test measures students' knowledge in English and math. The English and math scores for 10 randomly selected students were recorded and analyzed. The results are shown in the computer output. Which of the following represents the standard deviation of the residuals?

1.223 -34.55 78.712 124.13

Hannah has a chicken coop with 6 hens. Let X be the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the standard deviation of the distribution?

1.39

A professional basketball player typically attempts 8 free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of 8. The distribution for X is shown in the table. What is the standard deviation of the distribution?

1.40

What is the z* critical value for constructing an 88% confidence interval for a proportion?

1.55

What is the z* critical value for constructing a 90% confidence interval for a proportion?

1.65

What is the z* critical value for constructing a 92% confidence interval for a proportion?

1.75

Twenty-four pairs of adult brothers and sisters were sampled at random from a population. The difference in heights, recorded in inches (brother's height minus sister's height), was calculated for each pair. The 95% confidence interval for the mean difference in heights for all brother-and-sister pairs in this population was (-0.76, 4.34). What was the sample mean difference from these 24 pairs of siblings?

1.79 inches

The length (in inches) and weight (in ounces) for a type of bass were measured for a random sample of 10 bass from a lake. These measurements were then analyzed and the results are given in the computer output. Which of the following represents the average distance between the actual weight and the predicted weight of the bass?

1.80

What is the z* critical value for constructing a 94% confidence interval for a proportion?

1.88

A manufacturing company has 5 vice presidents: Andrew, Beth, Charles, Diane, and Eric. Their regional responsibilities are shown in the table. The president of the company wants to randomly select 2 of the 5 vice presidents to send to a conference. How many distinct groups of 2 vice presidents can be selected without replacement from this small population of 5 vice presidents?

10

The stemplot shows the years of experience for several teachers at Sycamore High School. What is the IQR of the data?

10 years

A random sample of 40 seniors reveals that 10% of those sampled have assigned parking spaces in the high school's main lot. This is surprising because, according to the main office of a large high school, 45% of seniors have assigned parking spaces in the high school's main lot. Which of the following statements is true?

10% is a statistic and 45% is a parameter.

The list shows the mileage rating (in mpg) for some 2019 vehicles with all-wheel or four-wheel drive. 11, 13, 14, 14, 15, 15, 15, 16, 16, 16, 17, 17, 17, 17, 18, 18, 18, 18, 19, 19, 19, 19, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21, 22, 22, 22, 22, 22, 23, 23, 23, 23, 23, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 25, 25, 25, 26, 26, 26, 27, 27, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34 Which intervals are most appropriate for a histogram displaying the mileage ratings?

10-15, 15-20, 20-25, 25-30, 30-35

Based on data taken from airline fares and distances flown, it is determined that the equation of the least-squares regression line is ŷ = 102.50 + 0.65x, where ŷ is the predicted fare and x is the distance, in miles. One of the flights was 500 miles and its residual was 115.00. What was the fare for this flight?

102.50 312.50 427.50 -542.50

Two local hotels, X and Y, rent out rooms nightly. Let X represent the number of rooms hotel X rents out nightly, and let Y represent the number of rooms hotel Y rents out nightly. The mean of X is 49, and the mean of Y is 58. Which answer choice correctly calculates and interprets the mean of the sum, S = X + Y?

107; the hotels can expect to rent out 107 rooms, on average, each night.

The scatterplot shows the relationship between the number of participants in a fundraiser and the amount of money raised. The regression equation is ŷ = 67.79 + 6.72x. How many participants are needed in order for the school to raise $800?

109

The fare charged for a rideshare service is a function of the distance traveled. However, the fare differs according to the time of day, availability, and other variables. The distance and fares for 10 rides are shown in the table. The equation of the least-squares regression line is ŷ = 5.20 + 2.33x, where ŷ is the predicted fare and x is the distance. What is the residual for the rideshare cost with a distance of 16 miles?

11.35

A clinic measured the systolic blood pressure for a random sample of 10 patients. The resulting 95% confidence interval for the mean systolic blood pressure of all the patients at this clinic was (111.3, 129.5). What was the mean systolic blood pressure from the sample of 10 patients?

120.4

An arena manager tallies the number of snack items (hot dogs, nachos, and popcorn) sold at each of three concession stands in the arena. Snack Item Hot DogsNachosPopcornTotalConcessionStandsStand A1256540230Stand B21811952389Stand C655213130 Total408236105749 What is the probability that a customer purchased popcorn, given that they purchased from stand B?

13.4%

The table shows how surveyed drivers obtained their current vehicle and how they plan to get their next vehicle. What percent of drivers surveyed bought their current vehicle new and will buy a new vehicle again next time? Round your answer to the nearest whole number; you do not need to enter the percent symbol.

16

The probability of an archer hitting her target is 83%. Suppose she has 20 shots to take, and each shot is independent of the others. Let X represent the number of targets hit. What is the mean of X? 4.1 8.3 16.6 83

16.6

Carlos notices he usually pushes the clear button on his calculator more than once each time he wants to clear the screen. Carlos' teacher suggests that about 20% of all students have this habit, but Carlos thinks it might be greater. He randomly selects 100 students in his school and finds that 25 of them push the clear button more than once. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of students who push the clear button more than once is greater than 20%, 100 trials of a simulation are conducted. Carlos is testing the hypotheses: H0: p = 20% and Ha: p > 20%, where p = the true proportion of students who push the clear button more than once. Based on the results of the simulation, what is the estimate of the P-value of the test?

17%

A farmer determines that, on average, his chickens lay a total of 16 eggs each day. A random sample of 10 days was taken, and the mean number of eggs was determined. Let μ = the true mean number of eggs the chickens lay each day. Which of the following values for the sample mean is the least likely to occur?

18

The scatterplot displays the number of pretzels students could grab with their dominant hand and their handspan, measured in centimeters. An analysis was completed and the computer output is shown. PredictorCoefSE Coeft-ratiopConstant-14.714.3171.6890.046Handspan1.5850.3105.1140.000 S = 3.05R-Sq = 52.1%R-Sq(Adj) = 51.7% Using the computer output, what is the predicted number of pretzels a person with a handspan of 21 cm could grab?

18.58 pretzels

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let X represent the score on a randomly selected exam. The distribution of scores for one subject's standardized test is given in the table. What is the mean of the distribution?

2.95

The final exam grade distribution for all students in the introductory statistics class at a local community college is displayed in the table, with A = 4, B = 3, C = 2, D = 1, and F = 0. Let X represent the grade for a randomly selected student from the class. What is the mean of the distribution?

2.98

A farmer sows 100 seeds of a new type of corn and wants to quickly determine the yield, or total number of ears of corn, for the crop when it has matured. He decides to take a simple random sample of the crop by using a random digit table. What is the fewest number of digits that should be used, given that there are 100 plants in total?

2

At West High School, 10% of the students participate in sports. A student wants to simulate the act of randomly selecting 20 students and counting the number of students in the sample who participate in sports. The student assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0 = student participates in sports 1-9 = student does not participate in sports Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many students in this random sample of 20 students participate in sports?

2

At a carnival, a customer notices that a prize wheel has 5 equal parts, one of which is labeled "winner." She would like to conduct a simulation to determine how many spins it would take for the wheel to land on "winner." She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0, 1 = winner 2-9 = not a winner Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many spins does it take until the first prize is won?

2

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase and makes a probability distribution based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the median of the distribution?

2

hypothesis tests (tests of significance)

2 hypotheses about the population and the null and alternative hypothesis

A spinner is divided into six equal-sized sectors labeled 1 through 6. Dwayne spins this spinner 12 times. Let X represent the number of 1s that are spun. What are the mean and standard deviation of X?

2, 1.29

A jar contains 11 red marbles, 12 blue marbles, and 6 white marbles. Four marbles from this jar are selected, with each marble being replaced after each selection. What is the standard deviation of X, the number of draws until the first red marble?

2.0770

A local charity holds a carnival to raise money. In one activity, participants make a $3 donation for a chance to spin a wheel that has 10 spaces marked with the values 0, 1, 2, 5, and 10. The participant wins the dollar amount marked on the space on which the wheel stops. Let X represent the value of a spin. The distribution of X is given in the table. What is the expected value of the distribution?

2.1

The dotplot shows the number of hours per day 20 high school students spent watching television shows one summer. Use the dotplot to answer the questions. The median number of hours is -. This median number of hours indicates that -.

2.5 the same number of students spend less than and more than 2.5 hours

What is the z* critical value for constructing a 99% confidence interval for a proportion?

2.58

The table shows the number of smartphones sold at an electronics store each day. To the nearest tenth, what is the standard deviation of the data? Use this formula:

2.7 smartphones

A cafeteria purchases milk from one of three providers each week, depending on what other items need to be purchased. The probability of shopping at each store and the cost of one gallon of milk are shown in the table below.

2.90

The list shows the mileage rating (in mpg) for some 2019 vehicles with all-wheel or 4-wheel drive. 11, 13, 14, 14, 15, 15, 15, 16, 16, 16, 17, 17, 17, 17, 18, 18, 18, 18, 19, 19, 19, 19, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21, 21, 22, 22, 22, 22, 22, 23, 23, 23, 23, 23, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 25, 25, 25, 26, 26, 26, 27, 27, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34 Which interval has the greatest frequency?

20-25

The table shows the horsepower and top speeds of a variety of boat motors. What is the equation of the least-squares regression line, where ŷ is the predicted top speed and x is the horsepower?

21.2 .14 35

Natalia estimates that she wins a board game 72% of the time. How large of a random sample is required to obtain a margin of error of at most 0.06 with 95% confidence?

216

The stemplot below displays the times, in seconds, for 25 students to run 100 meters. Which of the following is the correct five-number summary?

22, 24.5, 26, 28, 30

A recent study estimated that 68% of US adults enjoy reading a book while relaxing. How many adults are required for a random sample to obtain a margin of error of at most 0.05 with 90% confidence?

236

A sports statistician was interested in the relationship between game attendance (in thousands) and the number of wins for baseball teams. Information was collected on several teams and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 4.9x + 15.2, where x represents the attendance (in thousands) and ŷ is the predicted number of wins. What is the predicted number of wins for a team that has an attendance of 2,100?

25.49 wins

A scientist wants to sample fish from a large aquarium to estimate the true proportion of striped fish. How many fish are required for a random sample to obtain a margin of error of at most 0.06 with 95% confidence?

267

A game of "Doubles-Doubles" is played with two dice. If a player rolls doubles, the player earns 3 points and gets another roll. If the player rolls doubles again, the player earns 9 more points. How many points should the player lose for not rolling doubles in order to make this a fair game?

27/35

In a certain breed of cattle, the length of gestation has a mean of 284 days and a standard deviation of 5.5 days. What is the length of the gestation period, to the nearest whole number, that is 0.7 standard deviations below the mean?

280 days

A researcher needs to assign 45 subjects, numbered 01 to 45, to one of three treatment groups: A, B, or C. Use the table of random digits, starting with the first row and first column, to carry out the random assignment. Which subjects will be in group A?

29, 17, 37, 20, 45, 27, 12, 23, 26, 25, 19, 30, 11, 28, 31

A researcher is comparing the effectiveness of three devices designed to help people who snore. There are 60 people who snore participating in the experiment who are labeled 01-60. Using a table of random digits, the researcher will randomly place the participants into three equally sized treatment groups suitable for comparison. Carry out the random assignment using the given selection from a table of random digits, starting with the first row and first column. Which list assigns the first eight people to the device 1 group?

29, 17, 37, 48, 20, 27, 12, 23

A shipping company claims that 95% of packages are delivered on time. A student wants to conduct a simulation to estimate the number of packages that would need to be randomly selected to find a package that was not delivered on time. The student assigns the digits to the outcomes. 00-04 = package not delivered on time 05-99 = package delivered on time Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many packages need to be selected at random in order to find one that is not delivered on time?

3

At a large university, 20% of students are enrolled in the nursing program. The dean of students selects a random sample of 20 students and records n = the number of students enrolled in the nursing program. The dean decides to simulate this random process by using a random number table. He assigns the digits to the outcomes. 1, 2 = student is enrolled in nursing program 3-9, 0 = student not enrolled in nursing program Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many students in this random sample of 20 students are enrolled in the nursing program?

3

Mrs. Bready has a large bag filled with red and green cards. She tells the class that 15% of the cards are red and 85% are green. At the end of each class, she mixes the cards, reaches inside the bag, and draws out one card at random. If a red card is drawn, the students will not be assigned homework. She shows the class the card, and then places the card back in the bag. Carla would like to carry out a simulation to estimate the number of days it will take in order to get a "no homework" day. She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 00-14 = red 15-99 = green Here is a portion of a random number table. Beginning at line 1, carry out one trial of this simulation. Use additional lines as needed. How many days does it take to find the first "no homework" day?

3

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let X represent the score on a randomly selected exam. The distribution of scores for one subject's standardized test is given in the table. What is the median of the distribution?

3

The final exam grade distribution for all students in the introductory statistics class at a local community college is displayed in the table, with A = 4, B = 3, C = 2, D = 1, and F = 0. Let X represent the grade for a randomly selected student from the class. What is the median of the distribution?

3

The graph shows the number of states and Washington, DC, within each range of electoral votes for the 2020 presidential election. Which interval contains 11 states? Check all that apply.

3 to 6 6 to 9

A local charity holds a carnival to raise money. In one activity, participants make a $3 donation for a chance to spin a wheel that has 10 spaces marked with the values 0, 1, 2, 5, and 10. The participant wins the dollar amount marked on the space on which the wheel stops. Let X be the value of a random spin. The distribution of X is given in the table. What is the standard deviation of the distribution?

3.01

There are frogs and koi in a pond, and the number of frogs and the number of koi in the pond are independent. Let X represent the number of frogs in any given week, and let Y represent the number of koi in any given week. X has a mean of 28 with a standard deviation of 2.7, and Y has a mean of 15 with a standard deviation of 1.6. Which answer choice correctly calculates and interprets the standard deviation of the difference, D = X - Y?

3.1; this pond can expect the difference of frogs and koi to vary by approximately 3.1 from the mean.

The daily temperatures for the winter months in Virginia are Normally distributed with a mean of 59°F and a standard deviation of 10°F. A random sample of 10 temperatures is taken from the winter months and the mean temperature is recorded. What is the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 10 from this population?

3.2

During the 2016 Rio Olympics, Simone Biles scored 62.366 points in the women's all-around competition, and Oleg Verniaiev scored 91.964 points in the men's all-around competition. Both Biles and Verniaiev won gold medals. Which athlete had a stronger performance? Round to the nearest hundred, if necessary.

3.257 greater than 2.433 simone biles oleg v

According to records at the guidance office, the mean GPA of all juniors is 3.45 and the mean GPA of all seniors is 3.62. Which of the following statements is true?

3.45 is a parameter and 3.62 is a parameter.

The probability of a high school basketball team winning any game is 58%. This team is in a six-game tournament, and the games are played independently of one another. Let X represent the number of games the team might win in this tournament. What are the mean and standard deviation of X?

3.48, 1.21

The weights of bunches of bananas in the grocery store are Normally distributed with a mean weight of 3.54 pounds and a standard deviation of 0.64 pounds. A random sample of four bunches is taken and the mean weight is recorded. Which of the following is the mean of the sampling distribution for the mean of all possible samples of size four?

3.54

he histogram shows the heights of flowers in a greenhouse. The interval - contains the median height of the flowers. This median height indicates that -.

30-40 ✔ about the same number of flowers are shorter than and taller than the interval of 30-40 inches.

The owner of an apple orchard knows that the average weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams. A random sample of 40 apples was selected and the mean weight was calculated. Let μ = the true mean weight of the Granny Smith apples in the orchard. Which of the following means is least likely to occur if the true mean weight is 380 grams?

300 grams

Mr. Jackson gave an exam worth 50 points. The mean score on the exam was 38, and the standard deviation was 4. Mr. Jackson also reported his students' z-scores. Corey's z-score was -1.75. This means that Corey scored

31 points on the exam

A student wants to investigate the proportion of students who would support a fundraiser at a large high school. Which of the following sample sizes would have the least variability?

35

When sampling, which of the following sample sizes will yield the smallest variability in results obtained from repeated sampling from the population?

35

Hannah has a chicken coop with 6 hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the median of the distribution?

4

Hannah has a chicken coop with 6 hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day. The distribution for X is given in the table. What is the mean of the distribution?

4.2

The value of s for a relationship between the number of hours and the number of gallons of water remaining in a tank is calculated using computer software. Identify and interpret the value of s by completing the sentence.

4.80079 gallons 5

The weight of infants follows a bell-shaped distribution with mean 7.5 pounds and standard deviation 1.75 pounds. A baby born two weeks early has a standardized score of -1.5. What is the baby's actual weight? Round your answer to the nearest hundredth.

4.88 pounds at birth

The daily temperatures for the winter months in Virginia are Normally distributed with a mean of 59°F and a standard deviation of 10°F. The daily temperatures for the winter months in California are Normally distributed with a mean of 64°F and a standard deviation of 12°F. Random samples of 10 temperatures are taken from the winter months for both Virginia and California. The mean temperature is recorded for both samples. Let represent the difference in the mean temperatures for the winter months in Virginia and California. Which of the following represents the standard deviation of the sampling distribution for xv-xc?

4.9

In a certain board game, a 12-sided number cube showing numbers 1 through 12 is rolled. In this game, a number cube must be rolled until a number 9 or higher appears. What is the probability that the first such number is on the 3rd roll?

4/27

Vehicles passing over a bridge have two options for paying their bridge toll: paying with a live cashier or using a Speed Pass device affixed to the dashboard. Data on a busy day for cars and trucks passing over the bridge are shown here. Payment Method Live CashierSpeed PassTotalVehicle TypeCar3567102Truck184765 Total53114167 What percentage of vehicles are trucks, given that they use Speed Pass?

41.2%

The heights of five-year-olds are Normally distributed with a mean of 42.5 inches and a standard deviation of 2.5 inches. A random sample of 16 five-year-olds is taken and the mean height is recorded. What would be the mean of the sampling distribution of all possible samples of size 16?

42.5

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the price of bobbleheads and the demand of bobbleheads. Information was collected from a market research survey and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = -0.227x + 50.455, where x represents the price of a bobblehead (measured in dollars) and ŷ is the predicted demand of bobbleheads (in units). What is the predicted demand of a bobblehead that has price of $29.99?

43.64727 units

A sports analyst determines that the number of points scored in a basketball game is related to the number of shots taken during the game. The least-squares regression line is ŷ = 5.0 + 1.2x, where ŷ is the predicted number of points scored and x is the number of shots taken. In one game, a team takes 50 shots and the residual is -10. How many points were scored by this team in this game?

45 -55 65 75

The histogram shows the amount of time Mr. Crawford's students spent on homework. The mean of the data could be - minutes. This mean time indicates that - on homework.

45 on average, students spend 41 to 60 minutes

A professional basketball player typically attempts 8 free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of 8. The distribution for X is shown in the table. What is the median of the distribution?

5

The times to pop a regular bag of microwave popcorn without burning it are Normally distributed with a mean time of 140 seconds and a standard deviation of 20 seconds. The times to pop a mini bag of microwave popcorn without burning it are Normally distributed with a mean time of 90 seconds and a standard deviation of 15 seconds. Suppose two independent random samples, 25 of each, are taken and the mean popping times are calculated. Let R = the popping time of a randomly selected regular-sized bag and M = the popping time of a mini-sized bag. Which of the following best describes the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of xr-xm?

5 seconds

The graph displays the vacation preferences of people in relation to their states of residency. Use the drop-down menu to complete the statement based on the bar graph. Kansas residents prefer big city vacations about -more than nature vacations and about - less than beach vacations.

5% 30%

A local sandwich shop makes an Italian sandwich that contains ham, salami, and pepperoni meats. Let X represent the weight of ham, Y represent the weight of salami, and Z represent the weight of pepperoni for each Italian sandwich made. The mean of X is 2 ounces, the mean of Y is 1.25 ounces, and the mean of Z is 1.75 ounces. What is the mean of the sum, S = X + Y + Z?

5.0 ounces

Tropical islands have many rainstorms during the afternoon heat. One particular tropical island has a 79% chance of a rainstorm on any given afternoon. Abraham is planning a weeklong stay on this tropical island. Let X represent the number of days there is an afternoon tropical storm that week. What are the mean and standard deviation of X?

5.53, 1.08

The arm span and foot length were measured (in centimeters) for each of the 19 students in a statistics class and displayed in the scatterplot. An analysis was completed and the computer output is shown. PredictorCoefSE Coeft-ratiopConstant-7.6112.5672.9650.046Arm span0.1860.0355.3770.000 S = 1.61R-Sq = 63.0%R-Sq(Adj) = 62.7% Using the computer output, what is the predicted foot length for a student with an arm span of 160 cm?

5.79 cm 22.15 cm - 29.76 cm 29.80 cm

A beauty product company conducts a study to test the effectiveness of a new shampoo to control split ends. One hundred subjects have volunteered to take part in the study, and will be split into a treatment group and a placebo group. The study leader will randomly assign the subjects to the groups using slips of paper. How many slips of paper will the researcher need to draw in order to randomly assign subjects to the treatment groups?

50

A telemarketing company is conducting a study of new calling scripts. Seventy-five employees will be randomly assigned to three new scripts using a table of random digits. The study leader will assign the subjects to the groups using a table of random digits. How many unique two-digit numbers within the range of 01 to 75 will the study designer need to select from the table?

50

The pie chart shows the favorite type of book of the more than 50,000 high school students. About what percent of favorite type of book is drama? About what percent is mystery?

50% 25%

The owner of a tire company wants to determine how long a new type of tire tread will last by measuring the length of time, in days, it takes for the tire tread to reach 2 mm. Let μ = the true mean number of days it takes for the tire tread to wear to 2 mm. Which of the following sample sizes will have the least variability in the sampling distribution of the sample mean?

55

The height of the 10-year-old girls at Franklin Elementary School follows a bell-shaped distribution with mean 54.5 inches and standard deviation 2.7 inches. Jazmin's height has a standardized score of 1.5. What is Jazmin's actual height? Round your answer to the nearest hundredth. Jazmin's actual height is

58.55 inches

This scatterplot shows the study time, in hours, versus test score for 17 students. Which combinations of study times and test scores would be considered unusual observations? Check all that apply.

6 hours; score of 35 9 hours; score of 40 14 hours; score of 55

A zoo collected data on the diving times of turtles. Based on the data, the regression line is ŷ = 0.010 + 2.515x, where x is the time of the dive, in minutes. Based on the regression equation, what is the predicted dive depth in meters at 150 seconds? Give your answer to three decimal places.

6.298 meters

The table shows the weight and gas mileage of several vehicles. What is the equation of the least-squares regression line, where ŷ is the predicted gas mileage and x is the weight? According to the regression equation, a car that weighs 1.8 tons would have a gas mileage of about

64.6 -20.2 28

Incorrect data: 43 46 48 48 49 50 50 52 53 57 57 60 Corrected data: 34 46 48 48 49 50 50 52 53 57 57 60 IQR (incorrect data) = IQR (corrected data) = The IQR - measure

7 7 a resistant

This scatterplot is used to predict when the next eruption event will happen. The regression equation is ŷ = 30.33 + 11.44x. Use the scatterplot and regression equation to complete the statement. If the duration of a future eruption event is 210 seconds, guests can expect the next event to happen in approximately

70 minutes

An anthropologist is interested in the relationship between fathers' and sons' heights. She collects a simple random sample of 25 fathers and 25 sons and determines that the least-squares regression line is ŷ =-2.8 + 1.1x, where ŷ is the predicted height of each son and x is the height of his father (both measured in inches). One father is 70 inches tall and the residual for his son's height is 2.5. What is the son's actual height?

71.7 inches 74.2 inches -76.7 inches 82.3 inches

The scatterplot displays the number of pretzels students could grab with their dominant hand and their handspan, measured in centimeters. An analysis was completed and the computer output is shown. PredictorCoefSE Coeft-ratiopConstant-14.714.3171.6890.046Handspan1.5850.3105.1140.000 S = 3.05R-Sq = 52.1%R-Sq(Adj) = 51.7% Using the computer output, what is the predicted number of pretzels a person with a handspan of 21 cm could grab?

8.10 pretzels 10.83 pretzels -18.58 pretzels 75.95 pretzels

At a certain pizzeria, it is known that 12% of orders are for extra-large pizzas. What is the expected number of pizzas that will be ordered until the first extra-large pizza is ordered?

8.33

A medical device company knows that the percentage of patients experiencing injection-site reactions with the current needle is 11%. What is the standard deviation of X, the number of patients seen until an injection-site reaction occurs?

8.5763

This scatterplot is used to predict when the next eruption event will happen. The regression equation is ŷ = 30.33 + 11.44x. Use the scatterplot to complete the statements. Prediction 1: If the duration of an event is 4.5 minutes, guests can expect about

82 more than prediction one

A clinic measured the systolic blood pressure for a random sample of 10 patients. The resulting 95% confidence interval for the mean systolic blood pressure of all the patients at this clinic was (111.3, 129.5). What was the margin of error for this confidence interval?

9.1

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads. He wants his students to estimate the difference in the proportion of red beads in each container. Each student shakes the first container, randomly selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student sampled 13 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the 95% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of red beads in each container?

A

Joe takes part in math competitions. A particular contest consists of 25 multiple-choice questions, and each question has 5 possible answers. It awards 6 points for each correct answer, 1.5 points for each answer left blank, and 0 points for incorrect answers. Joe is sure of 12 of his answers. He ruled out 2 choices before guessing on 4 of the other questions and randomly guessed on the 9 remaining problems. What is his expected score?

90.8

The value of r2 for a relationship between distance (in miles) and the cost (in dollars) of a shuttle bus from a hotel to an airport is calculated using computer software. Identify and interpret the value of r2 by completing the sentence.

96.80% 97% cost distance (in miles)

A doctor would like to estimate the mean difference in height of pairs of identical twins. The doctor randomly selects 8 pairs of identical twins and determines the current height, in inches, of each twin. The data are displayed in the table. What is the mean difference (twin 1 - twin 2) and the standard deviation of the differences?

A

A drug manufacturing company believes it has found a new medication to alleviate pain for headache sufferers. Twenty people with chronic headaches are asked to take a placebo pill or a pill containing the new medication during their next headache episode. The pill they take is determined by a coin flip. An hour later, the participants are asked to rate their headache pain level on a scale from 1 (no pain) to 5 (severe pain). During their next headache episode, the subjects are asked to take the other pill. The difference in pain ratings (new pill - placebo) is calculated for each subject. What are the hypotheses the company should use?

A

A laundry detergent company wants to determine if a new formula of detergent, A, cleans better than the original formula, B. Researchers randomly assign 500 pieces of similarly soiled clothes to the two detergents, putting 250 pieces in each group. After washing the clothes, independent reviewers determine the cleanliness of the clothes on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the cleanest. The researchers calculate the proportion of clothes in each group that receive a rating of 7 or higher. For detergent A, 228 pieces of clothing received a 7 or higher. For detergent B, 210 pieces of clothing received a rating of 7 or higher. Let pA = = the true proportion of clothes receiving a rating of 7 or higher for detergent A and pB = the true proportion of clothes receiving a rating of 7 or higher for detergent B. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the company's claim?

A

A local school board wants to determine if the proportion of households in the district that would support starting the school year a week earlier has changed from the previous year. Last year, the school board determined that 65% of households supported starting school earlier. They ask a random sample of 100 households this year, and 70% state they would support starting the school year earlier. Which hypotheses would determine if the proportion of households that support starting school earlier has changed this year?

A

A nutritionist believes that 10% of teenagers eat cereal for breakfast. To investigate this claim, she selects a random sample of 150 teenagers and finds that 25 eat cereal for breakfast. She would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who eat cereal for breakfast differs from 10%. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

A

A political candidate feels that she performed particularly well in the most recent debate against her opponent. Her campaign manager polled a random sample of 400 likely voters before the debate and a random sample of 500 likely voters after the debate. The 95% confidence interval for the true difference (post-debate minus pre-debate) in proportions of likely voters who would vote for this candidate was (-0.014, 0.064). What was the difference (pre-debate minus post-debate) in the sample proportions of likely voters who said they will vote for this candidate?

A

A restaurant is interested in the relationship between the number of people in a party and the bill for their dinner. An owner of a restaurant records the number of people in the party and the bill for 10 groups of people as shown in the table. The equation of the least-squares regression line isŷ = 16.5 + 8.51x, where ŷ is the bill for the dinner and xis number of people in the party. Which shows the residual plot?

A

A statistics student believes that black cars are less likely to receive tickets for moving violations. Black cars make up 19% of all cars manufactured. The student randomly selects 70 moving violation records and finds that 10 of them involve black cars. Which hypotheses would test the student's claim?

A

A statistics teacher is interested in whether there is a difference in the accuracy of dominant versus nondominant hands. She asks her students to roll a ball, once with each hand, toward a target. The students then measure the distance, in centimeters, between the ball and the target. Students will determine which hand they use first by tossing a coin. The differences (nondominant - dominant) in the distances for each student are listed. 28, -33, 25, 41, -14, 21, 12, -30, 17, 26, 32, 27, -25, 18, 10, 22, -19, 4, 31, 19 What are the hypotheses the teacher should use?

A

A used car dealership is interested in the age of a used car and the price of the vehicle. The manager collects a simple random sample of vehicles as shown in the table. The equation of the least-squares regression line isŷ = 19.2 - 0.868x, where ŷ is the price of the vehicle (in thousands of dollars) and x is the age (in years). Which shows the residual plot?

A

After a hailstorm, a large car dealership wants to determine the proportion of cars that have damage. The service department randomly selects 50 cars on the dealership lot, examines them, and determines that 18 have damage. Assuming all conditions have been met, they construct a 99% confidence interval for the true proportion of cars with damage from the storm. What are the calculations for this interval?

A

College administrators noticed that students who had higher high school GPAs tend to have higher college GPAs. The data in the table show various high school GPAs and college GPAs for a sample of students. Which scatterplot represents the student data?

A

In a statistics activity, students are asked to spin a penny and a dime and determine the proportion of times that each lands with tails up. The students believe that since a dime is lighter, it will have a lower proportion of times it will land tails up compared to the penny. The students are instructed to spin the penny and the dime 30 times and record the number of times each lands tails up. For one student, the penny lands tails side up 18 times, and the dime lands tails side up 20 times. Let pD = the true proportion of times a dime will lands tails up and pP = the true proportion of times a penny will land tails up. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the student's claim?

A

Machine engineers are designing a new ice cube machine. They notice that designs that use cubes containing higher volumes of water take longer to freeze. The data in the table show various volumes (in milliliters) and freezing times (in hours) for a sample of machine designs. Which scatterplot represents the data?

A

The following are the winning times, in seconds, for the Kentucky Derby from 1997 to 2016. Select the boxplot that represents the data. 122.4, 124.2, 123.2, 121, 119.97, 121.1, 121.19, 124.06, 122.75, 121.36, 122.17, 121.82, 122.66, 124.04, 122.04, 121.83, 122.89, 123.66, 123.02, 121.3

A

The mean price of houses in the US is $383,500. A real estate agent believes the mean price of houses in a local neighborhood is less than the national mean. The agent takes a random sample of 30 houses and finds the mean price to be $295,089 with a standard deviation of $156,321. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the =0.05 level that the mean price of the houses in the area is less than $383,500? What hypotheses should the real estate agent use to conduct a significance test?

A

The owner of a popular coffee shop wants to determine if there is a difference between the proportion of customers who use their own cups when they purchase a coffee beverage, and the proportion of customers who use their own cups when they purchase an espresso beverage. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all coffee purchases and 50 receipts from all espresso purchases. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For espresso purchases, 18 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 99% confidence interval for the difference in proportion of customers who use their own cups?

A

The president of the company wants to select 2 of the 5 vice presidents to send to a conference. The 10 possible samples of size 2 that can be selected from this population without replacement are (Andrew, Beth), (Andrew, Charles), (Andrew, Diane), (Andrew, Eric), (Beth, Charles), (Beth, Diane), (Beth, Eric), (Charles, Diane), (Charles, Eric), and (Diane, Eric). Which of the following gives the sampling distribution of the sample proportion of east regional responsibility for all possible samples of size 2 from this population?

A

The stemplot below displays the grades (out of 30) that 26 students received on a quiz. Which of the following boxplots correctly displays the distribution of quiz grades?

A

The table shows the number of vehicles by gas mileage rating (mpg) for all 2019 vehicles with all-wheel or four-wheel drive. Which histogram best displays the data? Use this graphic to answer the question.

A

Which residual plot shows data that would appear to be most appropriate to represent with a linear model?

A

Read each scenario and choose the type of bias that is exhibited.

A college professor has a colleague administer a survey to each member of his class about the effectiveness of his teaching strategies. This exhibits nonresponseX responseX undercoverage✔ no bias. At the end of a lecture, a college professor polls his lecture class of 200 students about the importance of attending his lectures. This exhibits nonresponseX response✔ undercoverageX no bias.

The table shows how surveyed drivers obtained their current vehicle and how they plan to get their next vehicle. Complete the table by selecting the missing counts for each letter.

A = 39 B = 9 C = 5

A plant in Alamo, TN, manufactures complex transformer components that must meet specific guidelines for safety. One such component is constructed to deliver 1,000 volts of electricity. A component creates a critical safety hazard if it absorbs humidity at a level above 3%. Any components that absorb too much humidity will be destroyed. A quality control inspector uses a random sample of components to conduct a hypothesis test with H0: The humidity level absorbed is 3%, and Ha: The humidity level absorbed is more than 3%. What is a Type I error in this context?

A Type I error would result in rejecting a true null hypothesis. This means the company would believe the humidity level is more than 3%, when in fact it is not more than 3%.

A coach surveyed a random sample of 200 college athletes about their height. Which statements are correct about the data in the table? Check all that apply.

A bar graph is an appropriate display. A pie chart is not appropriate because the categories do not add to 100%. A bar graph is appropriate because the frequencies are given.

Read each scenario and choose the type of bias that is exhibited.

A college professor polls each student as they leave the final exam about the effectiveness of his teaching strategies. This exhibits response✔ bias. A college professor hands out a notecard the last day of class asking each student to write comments about the effectiveness of his teaching strategies. This exhibits ✔ nonresponse

Identify the sampling designs that use convenience sampling. Check all that apply.

A grocery chain uses information from customer purchases to select products for future promotions. The first three people arriving at a movie theater are asked about their favorite movie genre. The drama club interviews patrons of the play about their interests in fine arts.

An inspector selects a random sample of 25 wireless keyboards from today's production line to assess whether or not they work properly. He finds that 24 of the 25 wireless keyboards do work properly. Which of the following conclusions can we draw from this study? A: We can infer that about 96% of the wireless keyboards produced by the manufacturer that day will work properly. B: We can draw conclusions about cause and effect for the population of all wireless keyboards produced today by this manufacturer.

A only

Identify the sampling designs that use voluntary response sampling. Check all that apply.

A pharmaceutical company advertises for subjects to participate in an online survey about insulin pumps for diabetics. An online poll is created for sports fans to vote on the winner for the Super Bowl. After each customer service call, callers are asked to stay on the line to complete a brief satisfaction survey.

To determine if carrot juice helps improve heart conditions, a juicing company asks a random sample of 100 adults about whether or not they drink carrot juice and their heart condition. The company finds an association between drinking carrot juice and healthy heart conditions. Which statement is true about a possible confounding variable?

A possible confounding variable is the amount of exercise. Those that drink carrot juice may be more concerned about their health and exercise more, which explains the healthy heart conditions.

Identify the sampling designs that use convenience sampling. Check all that apply.

A restaurant surveys all its breakfast customers about meal quality. A company that produces natural food flavorings conducts taste tests with all its employees. A veterinarian collects information from his or her clients about dog food brand preferences.

Which statement about stratified random sampling is true?

A stratified random sample is a combination of simple random samples selected from each of several strata.

A statistics teacher has 20 students in her class. Here is a graph showing the scores of the 20 students on a recent test. The teacher selects a random sample of 5 students from the class. Here is a graph displaying the scores of the students she selected. The teacher calculates the mean of this sample of 5 scores and plots it on a number line. She then repeats this process 100 times. Here are the results. Which of the following gives the correct order of the graphs of the population distribution, distribution of a single sample, and an approximate sampling distribution, respectively?

A, B, C

A manufacturing company has 5 vice presidents: Andrew, Beth, Charles, Diane, and Eric. Their regional responsibilities are shown in the table. Which of the following gives the correct order of the graphs of the population distribution, distribution of a single sample, and sampling distribution, respectively?

A, C, B

A manufacturer of cell phones would like to estimate how much longer the battery lasts in their model 10 phone than in their model 9 phone. To estimate this difference, they randomly select 40 cell phones of each model from the production line. They subject each phone to a standard battery life test. The 40 model 10 phones have a mean battery life of 14.4 hours with a standard deviation of 2.1 hours. The 40 model 9 phones have a mean battery life of 12.8 hours with a standard deviation of 2.3 hours. The conditions for inference have been met. What is the correct 95% confidence interval for the difference in the population means?

A- (0.594, 2.606)

In a large high school, 37% of the teachers believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. However, 89% of the students believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Let and be the sample proportions of teachers and students, respectively, who believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Suppose 28 teachers and 100 students are selected at random and asked their opinion on the amount of time students have to change class. Which of the following is the mean of the sampling distribution of ?

A- -0.52

Can a person train to become better at holding their breath? An experiment was designed to find out. A group of 12 volunteers were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups. The 6 volunteers assigned to group 1 were given breath-holding exercises to perform for 2 weeks. The other group was not given any information about the experiment. At the end of the 2 weeks, all 12 volunteers were individually tested to determine how long they could hold their breath. Here are the data (in seconds): Group 1: 90, 88, 70, 110, 75, 105 Group 2: 40, 48, 35, 50, 55, 62 The researcher would like to determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time volunteers who were given training held their breath is greater than the true mean amount of time volunteers without training held their breath. The researcher tests H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 > 0, where μ1 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers who were given training held their breath and μ2 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers without training held their breath. The conditions for inference are met. The standardized test statistic is t = 5.44. What is the P-value of this test closest to?

A- 0

A music professor is interested in the effects of listening to music while memorizing a list of words. She asks 14 volunteers to memorize two different lists of words: one list while listening to music in the background and the other list with no music in the background. The order of the treatments is determined by a coin toss. The mean difference (music - no music) in the number of words memorized is 4.1 words with a standard deviation of 3.8 words. Assuming that the conditions for inference are met, what is the P-value for testing the hypotheses H0 :μdiff = 0; Ha :μdiff > 0?

A- 0.0007

The time needed to broil cauliflower is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 6 minutes and a standard deviation of 1.9 minutes. If a random sample of 100 batches of cauliflower is selected, what is the probability the mean broiling time is more than 6.5 minutes?

A- 0.0042

A nurse at a local hospital wonders if the firstborn twin is taller than the second-born. He randomly selects the medical records of 33 sets of twins and finds the differences (firstborn - second-born) in the twins' heights, in centimeters. The mean of the differences is 1.1 centimeters with a standard deviation of 2.3 centimeters. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the P-value for testing the hypotheses H0 :μdiff = 0; Ha :μdiff > 0?

A- 0.0049

A student claims that statistics students at her school spend, on average, an hour doing statistics homework each night. In an attempt to substantiate this claim, she selects a random sample of 6 of the 62 students who are currently taking statistics and asks them how much time they spend completing statistics homework each night. She would like to know if there is convincing statistical evidence that the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night is less than 1 hour. The student plans to test the hypotheses, = 1 versus < 1, where μ = the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night. Assume all conditions have been met. The student discovers that the power of this test to reject the null hypothesis when μ = 0.75 is not very high. Which value of the alternative hypothesis would yield the greatest power of this test?

A- 0.25

Hal and Jose are avid crossword puzzle solvers. Hal solves 48% of his crossword puzzles in under 30 minutes, while Jose solves 39% of his crossword puzzles in under 30 minutes. Suppose that Hal solves 22 crossword puzzles and Jose solves 26 crossword puzzles. Because nJpJ, nJ (1-pJ), and nH (1-pH) are all greater than 10, the Normal condition is met. Let H = the proportion of Hal's crossword puzzles solved in under 30 minutes and J = the proportion of Jose's crossword puzzles solved in under 30 minutes. What is the probability that Jose's proportion of crossword puzzles solved in under 30 minutes is greater than Hal's?

A- 0.265

Some stores print multiple coupons and advertisements on their receipts, making the receipts unusually long. A curious shopper makes the same purchase at a random sample of 10 stores and measures the length of each receipt (in inches). Here are the results: 8.25, 7.5, 5, 9.5, 12, 5.5, 9, 14, 11.5, 18 What is the value of the standard error of the mean?

A- 1.256

A store manager claims that 60% of shoppers who enter her store make a purchase. To investigate this claim, she selects a random sample of 40 customers and finds that 40% of them make a purchase. She wants to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all customers who enter her store that will make a purchase differs from 60%. The P-value of this test is 0.0098. Interpret the P-value.

A- Assuming the true population proportion of shoppers who will make a purchase is 0.60, the probability of obtaining a sample statistic of 0.40 in a random sample of 40 customers is 0.0098.

From previous experience, the owner of an apple orchard knows that the mean weight of Gala apples is 140 grams. There has been more precipitation than usual this year. The owner believes the weights of the apples will be heavier than usual, and therefore the crop will be more profitable. The owner takes a random sample of 30 apples and records their mean weight. What is a Type I error in this situation?

A- Based on the sample mean, the owner concludes that the mean weight of apples is greater than 140 grams when the true mean weight is not greater than 140 grams.

A carnival game is designed so that approximately 10% of players will win a large prize. If there is evidence that the percentage differs significantly from this target, then adjustments will be made to the game. To investigate, a random sample of 100 players is selected from the large population of all players. Of these players, 19 win a large prize. The question of interest is whether the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of players who win this game differs from 0.10. The computer output gives the results of a z-test for one proportion.

A- Because the P-value < α = 0.05, the correct decision is to reject H0.

A local school board wants to determine if the proportion of households in the district that would support starting the school year a week earlier has changed from the previous year. Last year, the school board determined that 65% of households supported starting school earlier. They ask a random sample of 100 households this year, and 75% state they would support starting the school year earlier. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.04. What is the correct conclusion given ?

A- Because the P-value is less than 0.05, the school board should reject H0.

A teacher has a large container of blue, red, and green beads. She reports to the students that the proportion of blue beads in the container is 0.30. The students feel the proportion of blue beads is lower than 0.30. A student randomly selects 60 beads and finds that 12 of the beads are blue. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.045. What is the correct conclusion given

A- Because the P-value is less than a=0.05 , the student should reject H0.

Researchers wonder if practicing yoga reduces stress levels in adults. They select a random sample of 32 adults and assess their current stress levels. The participants are told to practice 60 minutes of yoga each day for one week. At the end of the week, their stress levels are assessed again. The mean difference (pre-yoga - post-yoga) in stress scores is 2.68 points with a standard deviation of 5.58 points. A positive value indicates that the subject's stress level decreased. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, is there statistical evidence that practicing yoga is associated with lower stress levels in adults like the ones in the study? Use a significance level of α = 0.05.

A- Because the P-value is less than α, there is evidence that practicing yoga is associated with lower stress levels, on average, in adults like the ones in the study.

A researcher is interested in whether parents and their children share the same opinion on topics. She selects a random sample of 31 pairs of mothers and their daughters. Each mother/daughter pair is shown a commercial and asked to rate the likelihood that they would purchase the product on a scale of 1 (not likely) to 5 (very likely). The mean difference (mother - daughter) of the ratings is 0.85 with a standard deviation of 1.59. Assuming all the conditions for inference have been met, is there evidence that, on average, mothers and daughters like those in the study would have different opinions about purchasing the product? Use a significance level of α = 0.05.

A- Because the P-value is less than α, there is evidence that, on average, mothers and daughters like those in the study would have different opinions about purchasing the product.

Simone read online that the failure rate in Arizona for the first attempt of the written driver's test is 60%. Simone thinks the Arizona rate is less than 60%. To investigate, she selects an SRS of 50 Arizona drivers and finds that 27 failed their first written driving test. To determine if this provides convincing evidence that the failure rate for Arizona is less than 60%, 200 trials of a simulation are conducted. Simone's hypotheses are: H0: p = 60% and Ha: p < 60%, where p = the true proportion of Arizona drivers who fail the first attempt of the written driver's test. Based on the results of the simulation, the estimated P-value of this test is 0.035. Using ∝ = 0.05, what conclusion should Simone reach?

A- Because the P-value of 0.035 < a , Simone should reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the Arizona written driver's test has a true first-attempt failure rate less than 60%.

A study was conducted to determine the true mean number of hours of television watched on school nights by teenagers. A 99% confidence interval for the true mean is 0.8 hours to 2.1 hours. Based upon this interval, what conclusion should be made about the hypotheses: =2.5 versus 2.5 where μ = the true mean number of hours of television watched on school nights by teenagers at α = 0.01?

A- Reject H0. Since 2.5 falls outside the 99% confidence interval, there is convincing evidence that the true mean number of hours of television watched on school nights by teenagers differs from 2.5 hours.

Devon's tennis coach says that 72% of Devon's serves are good serves. Devon thinks he has a higher proportion of good serves. To test this, 50 of his serves are randomly selected and 42 of them are good. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of Devon's serves that are good is greater than 72%, 100 trials of a simulation are conducted. Devon's hypotheses are: H0: p = 72% and Ha: p > 72%, where p = the true proportion of Devon's serves that are good. Based on the results of the simulation, the estimated P-value is 0.06. Using = 0.10, what conclusion should Devon reach?

A- Because the P-value of 0.06 < , Devon should reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the proportion of serves that are good is greater than 72%.

Lucy recently asked the servers at her restaurant to only give straws to customers who request them. She thinks that about half of the customers will ask for straws but hopes that the rate will be less than half. She randomly selects 100 customers and finds that 43 of them ask for a straw. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of customers who will ask for a straw is less than 50%, 150 trials of a simulation are conducted. Lucy is testing the hypotheses: H0: p = 50% and Ha: p < 50%, where p = the true proportion of customers who will ask for a straw. Based on the results of the simulation, the estimated P-value is 0.0733. Using = 0.10, what conclusion should Lucy reach?

A- Because the P-value of 0.0733 < , Lucy should reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the proportion of customers who will ask for a straw is less than 50%.

Derek Jeter challenges Albert Pujols to a batting battle. Each will earn 1 point for a hit other than a home run and 4 points for a home run in each round. Which player should you back given the statistics in the table below? Note that home runs are included as hits in the table.

A- E(Jeter) = 0.38 and E(Pujols) = 0.45, so back Pujols.

An emergency fund is defined as a savings account that has a balance equal to at least two months' living expenses. An article in a financial magazine claims that 80% of American adults do not have an emergency fund. To investigate this claim, a financial advisor selects a random sample of 150 American adults and finds that 112 do not have an emergency fund. The financial advisor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of Americans who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%. What are the appropriate hypotheses for this test?

A- H0: p = 0.80 versus Ha: p < 0.80, where p = the true proportion of all American adults who do not have an emergency fund.

A school guidance counselor is concerned that a greater proportion of high school students are working part-time jobs during the school year than a decade ago. A decade ago, 28% of high school students worked a part-time job during the school year. To investigate whether the proportion is greater today, a random sample of 80 high school students is selected. It is discovered that 37.5% of them work part-time jobs during the school year. The guidance counselor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all high school students who work a part-time job during the school year is greater than 0.28. The power of this test to reject the null hypothesis if p = 0.747 is 0.59 using a significance level of α = 0.05. What is the interpretation of the power of this test?

A- If the true proportion of high school students who work a part-time job during the school year is p = 0.747, there is a 0.59 probability that the guidance counselor will find convincing evidence for Ha: p > 0.28.

A shipping company claims that 95% of packages are delivered on time. A student wants to conduct a simulation to estimate the number of packages that would need to be randomly selected in order to find a package that was not delivered on time. What is an appropriate assignment of digits to carry out this simulation?

A- Let 00-04 = not delivered on time. Let 05-99 = delivered on time.

A random sample of 100 customers is selected, and the mean difference in their satisfaction rating for company A and company B is calculated. A rating of 1 indicates that a customer is highly dissatisfied, and a rating of 5 indicates that a customer is highly satisfied. A 90% confidence interval for the true mean difference (company A - company B) in satisfaction ratings is -2.5 to 1.5. Based on the confidence interval, the owner of company B claims that customers are more satisfied with his company than with company A. Is this claim supported by the 90% confidence interval?

A- No, the confidence interval does not consist entirely of positive numbers.

A teacher claims that his coffee cools to a temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit in 5 minutes after he brews it at home in his single-cup coffee brewer. To further investigate this claim, the teacher measures how long it takes for his coffee to cool to 100 degrees for each of the next 30 days. He would like to carry out a t-test for one mean to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time it takes for his coffee to cool to 100 degrees is less than 5 minutes. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- No, the random condition is not met.

To estimate the true mean speed of vehicles traveling on a particular section of roadway, a speed-detection device is programmed to measure the speed of the first 100 vehicles that pass it. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

A- No, the random condition is not met.

A local athletic facility offers a four-week training course, hoping to increase athletes' running speeds. Thirty-five volunteer athletes are timed, in seconds, running a 50-yard dash before the training program begins and then again after the program is complete. The difference in running times (before training - after training) is calculated for each athlete. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- No. This is not a random sample of athletes

It is claimed that 95% of teenagers who have a cell phone never leave home without it. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 300 teenagers who have a cell phone was selected. It was discovered that 273 of the teenagers in the sample never leave home without their cell phone. One question of interest is whether the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who never leave home without a cell phone is less than 95%. The standardized test statistic is z = -3.18 and the P-value is 0.0007. What decision should be made using the = 0.01 significance level?

A- Reject H0 because the P-value is less than = 0.01.

The mayor of a local town wants to determine if there is support for a certain proposal. The mayor's assistant randomly selects 100 households and asks whether they would support the mayor's proposal. Sixty responded that they would support it. What type of sampling is described in this study?

A- one sample

A student claims that statistics students at her school spend, on average, an hour doing statistics homework each night. In an attempt to substantiate this claim, she selects a random sample of 6 of the 62 students who are taking statistics currently and asks them how much time they spend completing statistics homework each night. Here are the data (in hours): 0.75, 0.75, 0.75, 0.5, 1, 1.25. She would like to know if the data provide convincing statistical evidence that the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night is less than one hour. The student plans to test the hypotheses, H0: μ = 1 versus Ha: μ < 1, where μ = the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night. The conditions for inference are met. The test statistic is t = -1.58 and the P-value is between 0.05 and 0.10. What conclusion should be made at the significance level, ?

A- Reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night is less than one hour.

A pool supply company sells 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. A customer believes that the company may be underfilling the buckets. To investigate, an inspector is hired. The inspector randomly selects 30 of these buckets of chlorine tablets and weighs the contents of each bucket. The sample mean is 49.4 pounds with a standard deviation of 1.2 pounds. The inspector would like to know if this provides convincing evidence that the true mean weight of the chlorine tablets in the 50-pound buckets is less than 50 pounds, so he plans to test the hypotheses H0: μ = 50 versus Ha: μ < 50, where μ = the true mean weight of all 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. The conditions for inference are met. The test statistic is t = -2.74 and the P-value is between 0.005 and 0.01. What conclusion should be made at the significance level, ?

A- Reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the true mean weight of the chlorine tablets in the 50-pound buckets is less than 50 pounds.

A laundry detergent company wants to determine if a new formula of detergent, A, cleans better than the original formula, B. Researchers randomly assign 500 pieces of similarly soiled clothes to the two detergents, putting 250 pieces in each group. After washing the clothes, independent reviewers determine the cleanliness of the clothes on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the cleanest. The researchers calculate the proportion of clothes in each group that receive a rating of 7 or higher. For detergent A, 228 pieces of clothing received a 7 or higher. For detergent B, 210 pieces of clothing received a rating of 7 or higher. Let pA = the true proportion of clothes receiving a rating of 7 or higher for detergent A and pB = the true proportion of clothes receiving a rating of 7 or higher for detergent B. The P-value for this significance test is 0.007. Which of the following is the correct conclusion for this test of the hypotheses

A- Researchers should reject the null hypothesis since 0.007 < 0.05. There is sufficient evidence that the true proportion of clothes receiving a rating of 7 or higher is significantly greater for the new formula of detergent.

A social scientist collects information about study time for a random sample of 40 students with the intention of testing the hypotheses = 2 hours per night versus 2 hours per night where = the true mean number of hours of study time per night for students. Rather than test these hypotheses, she computes the 90% confidence interval, (1.5, 1.8). Based upon the confidence interval, what conclusion can be made using = 0.10?

A- She should reject the null hypothesis. Since 2 falls outside of the 90% confidence interval, there is convincing evidence that the true mean number of hours of study time per night for students differs from 2 hours per night.

A plant in Alamo, TN, manufactures complex transformer components that must meet specific guidelines for safety. One such component is constructed to deliver 1,000 volts of electricity. A component creates a critical safety hazard if it absorbs humidity at a level above 3%. Any components that absorb too much humidity will be destroyed. A quality control inspector uses a random sample of components to conduct a hypothesis test with H0: The humidity level absorbed is 3%, and Ha: The humidity level absorbed is more than 3%. What is the consequence of a Type I error in this context?

A- The company believes the humidity absorption is more than 3% when in fact it is not. Correctly functioning components will be destroyed, at great expense to the company.

An emergency fund is defined as a savings account that has a balance equal to at least two months' living expenses. An article in a financial magazine claims that 80% of American adults do not have an emergency fund. To investigate this claim, a financial advisor selects a random sample of 150 Americans and finds that 112 do not have an emergency fund. The financial advisor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%. The power of this test to reject the null hypothesis if p = 0.747 is 0.49 using a significance level of α= 0.05. What are two ways the financial advisor could increase the power of this test?

A- The financial advisor could use a sample size that is larger than 150 and use a significance level that is larger than α = 0.05.

A local school board believes there is a difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 38 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. Let ps= the true proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week early and pw= the true proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. The P-value for this significance test is 0.000034. Which of the following is the correct conclusion for this test of the hypotheses

A- The local school board should reject the null hypothesis since 0.000034 < 0.05. There is sufficient evidence that the true proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week early is significantly different from the true proportion of households without school-aged children.

Nina would like to estimate the difference in the mean amount of time students spend on math homework at her public school versus her cousin Sharon's private school. To do so, each girl selects a random sample of 30 students from their large schools and asks the selected students how much time they spent doing math homework the previous night. Nina and Sharon would like to construct a 90% confidence interval for the true difference in the population means. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, all three conditions for inference are met.

The maintenance crew of a hotel has to monitor the temperature of the hotel pool and hot tub. To enhance comfort, the management team requests that the mean pool temperature and the mean hot tub temperatures not differ by more than 15 degrees. To estimate the difference in these mean temperatures the maintenance crew selects a random sample of 8 times to check the hot tub temperature and a random sample of 10 times to check the pool temperature. A 95% confidence interval for the difference in the population means is (11.97, 18.03). What is the interpretation of this interval?

A- The maintenance crew can be 95% confident that the interval from 11.97 to 18.03 captures the true difference in the mean temperatures (hot tub - pool).

An engineer would like to design a parking garage in the most cost-effective manner. The garage must be able to fit pickup trucks, which have an average height of 76.4 inches. To double-check this figure, the engineer employs a statistician. The statistician selects a random sample of 50 trucks, which will be used to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean height of all trucks is greater than 76.4 inches. The statistician plans to test the hypotheses, = 76.4 versus > 76.4, where μ = the true mean height of all trucks. The power of this test to reject the null hypothesis when μ = 77 inches is 0.97. What is the interpretation of 0.97?

A- The probability of rejecting H0: = 76.4 when = 77 inches is 0.97.

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportion of red beads is the same in each container. The students believe the proportions are different. Each student selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contained 13 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Let p1= the true proportion of red beads in container 1 and p2= the true proportion of red beads in container 2. Which of the following is a correct statement for the conditions for this test?

A- The random condition is not met.

The daily temperatures in fall and winter months in Virginia have a mean of 62oF. A meteorologist in southwest Virginia believes the mean temperature is colder in this area. The meteorologist takes a random sample of 15 daily temperatures from the fall and winter months over the last five years in southwest Virginia. The mean temperature for the sample is 58oF with a standard deviation of 4.12oF. A significance test at an alpha level of produces a P-value of 0.001. What is the correct interpretation of the P-value?

A- There is a 0.1% chance that a sample mean temperature of at most 58oF will occur by chance if the true mean temperature is 62oF.

The distribution of the heights of five-year-old children has a mean of 42.5 inches. A pediatrician believes the five-year-old children in a city are different. The pediatrician selects a random sample of 40 five-year-old children and measures their heights. The mean height of the sample is 41.7 inches with a standard deviation of 3.3 inches. A significance test at an alpha level of produces a P-value of 0.133. What is the correct interpretation of the P-value?

A- There is a 13.3% chance that a sample mean at least as extreme as 41.7 inches will occur by chance if the true mean height of five-year-old children is 42.5 inches.

A major car dealership has several stores in a big city. The owner wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportions of SUVs that are sold at stores A and B. The owner gathers the sales records for each store from the past year. A random sample of 55 receipts from store A shows that 30 of the sales were for SUVs. Another random sample of 60 receipts from store B shows that 45 of the sales were for SUVs. Based on the 99% confidence interval, (-0.43, -0.02), is there convincing evidence of a difference in the proportions of sales that are SUVs for the two stores?

A- There is convincing evidence because the entire interval is below 0.

A manufacturer of cell phones would like to estimate how much longer the battery lasts in their model 10 phone than in their model 9 phone. To estimate this difference, they randomly select 40 cell phones of each model from the production line. They subject each phone to a standard battery life test. The 40 model 10 phones have a mean battery life of 14.4 hours with a standard deviation of 2.1 hours. The 40 model 9 phones have a mean battery life of 12.8 hours with a standard deviation of 2.3 hours. A 95% confidence interval for the difference in the population means is (0.594, 2.606). What is the interpretation of this interval?

A- We can be 95% confident that the interval from 0.594 to 2.606 captures μ1 − μ2 = the true difference in the mean battery life for all model 9 and model 10 cell phones.

A doctor would like to estimate the mean difference in the number of hours of sleep for seniors in high school and seniors in college. To do so, he selects a random sample of 50 high school seniors from all high schools in his county. He also selects a random sample of 50 seniors from the colleges in his county. He would like to construct a 95% confidence interval for the true mean difference in the number of hours of sleep for seniors in high school and seniors in college. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, all three conditions for inference are met.

A manufacturer of cell phones would like to estimate how much longer the battery lasts in their model 10 phone than in their model 9 phone. To estimate this difference, they randomly select 40 cell phones of each model from the production line. They subject each phone to a standard battery life test. The 40 model 10 phones have a mean battery life of 14.4 hours with a standard deviation of 2.1 hours. The 40 model 9 phones have a mean battery life of 12.8 hours with a standard deviation of 2.3 hours. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, all three conditions for inference are met.

An experiment is conducted to estimate the difference in work productivity for employees under two conditions: with and without music playing in the background. Twenty employees volunteered to be part of the study. Ten of the volunteers were randomly assigned to work for one week with music playing in the background. The other 10 volunteers worked for one week without music playing in the background. Productivity is measured by counting the number of units produced for the week. Here are dotplots, which display the data: Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, all three conditions for inference are met.

From previous experience, the owner of an apple orchard knows that the mean weight of gala apples is 140 grams. This year there has been more precipitation than usual and the owner believes the weights of the apples are heavier than usual. The owner takes a random sample of 30 apples and records their weights. What type of sampling is described in this study?

A- one sample

The maintenance crew of a hotel must monitor the temperature of the hotel pool and hot tub. To enhance comfort, the management team requests that the mean pool temperature and the mean hot tub temperatures not differ by more than 15 degrees. To estimate the difference in these mean temperatures the maintenance crew selects a random sample of 8 times for checking the hot tub temperature and a random sample of 10 times for checking the pool temperature. Although the sample sizes are small, the distribution of temperature for the pool and for the hot tub does not show strong skewness or any outliers. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, all three conditions for inference are met.

A 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of math students who prefer to use a handheld calculator versus computer software for computations is (0.751, 0.863). Is it reasonable to believe more than 75% of math students prefer to use a handheld calculator versus computer software for computations?

A- Yes, because the entire interval is greater than 0.75.

It is claimed that 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 50 puppies is selected. It is discovered that 42 are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. A trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that greater than 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, the conditions for inference are met

A nutritionist believes that 10% of teenagers eat cereal for breakfast. To investigate this claim, she selects a random sample of 150 teenagers and finds that 25 eat cereal for breakfast. She would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who eat cereal for breakfast differs from 10%. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A restaurant manager believes that a majority of customers who dine at his restaurant would rate the food as excellent. To investigate this belief, he sends an email survey to a random sample of 50 customers from the large list of customers who have signed up for his frequent diner club. To encourage the customers to complete the survey, he offers a $10 gift card upon completion of the survey. He receives 22 responses, of which 20 rated the food as excellent. He would like to know if these data provide convincing evidence that more than 50% of customers who dine at his restaurant would rate the food as excellent. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

After a hailstorm, a large car dealership wants to determine the proportion of cars that have damage. The service department randomly selects 50 cars on the dealership lot, examines them, and finds that 11 cars have damage. They want to construct a 99% confidence interval for the true proportion of cars with damage from the storm. Are the conditions for inference met?

A- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

In a children's story, a young girl finds that one bowl of soup is too hot, another is too cold, and a third bowl is just right. Further study reveals that the temperature of the soup bowl that the young girl declared to be just right was 100°F. A researcher would like to test the hypotheses =100 versus 100 where μ = the true mean temperature of all bowls of soup. A 95% confidence interval based on a random sample of 30 bowls of soup is (100.9, 102.3). Using this interval, can the researcher reject the null hypothesis?

A- Yes, the null hypothesis can be rejected at the significance level α = 0.05, because 100 is not contained in the 95% confidence interval.

A carnival game is designed so that approximately 10% of players will win a large prize. If there is evidence that the percentage differs significantly from this target, then adjustments will be made to the game. To investigate, a random sample of 100 players is selected from the large population of all players. Of these players, 19 win a large prize. The question of interest is whether the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of players who win this game differs from 0.10. Are the conditions for inference met for conducting a z-test for one proportion?

A- Yes, the random, 10%, and large counts conditions are all met.

A school guidance counselor is concerned that a greater proportion of high school students are working part-time jobs during the school year than a decade ago. A decade ago, 28% of high school students worked a part-time job during the school year. To investigate whether the proportion is greater today, a random sample of 80 high school students is selected. It is discovered that 37.5% of them work part-time jobs during the school year. The guidance counselor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all high school students who work a part-time job during the school year is greater than 0.28. Are the conditions for inference met for conducting a z-test for one proportion?

A- Yes, the random, 10%, and large counts conditions are all met.

An emergency fund is defined as a savings account that has a balance equal to at least two months' living expenses. An article in a financial magazine claims that 80% of American adults do not have an emergency fund. To investigate this claim, a financial advisor selects a random sample of 150 Americans and finds that 112 do not have an emergency fund. The financial advisor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%. Are the conditions for inference met for conducting a z-test for one proportion?

A- Yes, the random, 10%, and large counts conditions are all met.

A company that sells hair-care products wants to determine if a product that combines shampoo and conditioner works better than a shampoo and conditioner used separately. A researcher recruits 60 volunteers and pairs them according to age, hair color, and hair type. For each pair, the researcher flips a coin to determine which volunteers will use the shampoo/conditioner combination and which ones will use the separate shampoo and conditioner. After using the products for one month, the subjects are asked to rate their satisfaction with the hair products on a scale of 1-10 (1 = highly dissatisfied and 10 = highly satisfied). What type of sampling is described in this study?

A- one sample

A student wants to determine the proportion of times a spun penny will land on heads. She spins a penny 50 times and records the number of times it lands on heads. What type of sampling is described in this study?

A- one sample

The manager of a large manufacturing company wants to estimate the proportion of items that have been manufactured with defects. How many items are required for a random sample to obtain a margin of error of at most 0.04 with 90% confidence?

B- 423

The mayor of a large town wants to estimate the proportion of households in the town that would support a proposal. The mayor's assistant randomly selects 100 households and asks whether they would support the mayor's proposal. Sixty households responded that they would. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

A- one-sample z-interval for p

A manufacturing company packages shipments in either large or small boxes. A random sample of 40 shipments that are packaged in large boxes is found to have a mean of 15 pounds and a standard deviation of 2.8 pounds. A separate random sample of 50 shipments that are packaged in small boxes is found to have a mean of 10 pounds and a standard deviation of 1.5 pounds. The manager would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in small boxes is less than the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in large boxes. The manager tests H0: μS - μL = 0, Ha: μS - μL < 0, where μL = the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in large boxes and μS = the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in small boxes. The conditions for inference have been met. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for a t-test about a difference in means?

A- t = -10.19. The P-value is less than 0.0005.

The distribution of professional baseball player salaries has a mean of $3.2 million. An analyst believes that the mean salary for teams on the East Coast is different. The analyst randomly selects 30 baseball players from teams on the East Coast and records their annual salaries. The mean salary for the players in the sample is $3.9 million with a standard deviation of $2.1 million. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean salary for the baseball players on the East Coast is different from $3.2 million? What are the test statistic and P-value for this significance test?

A- t = 1.83 and 0.05 < P-value < 0.10

An emergency fund is defined as a savings account that has a balance equal to at least two months' living expenses. An article in a financial magazine claims that 80% of American adults do not have an emergency fund. To investigate this claim, a financial advisor selects a random sample of 150 Americans and finds that 112 do not have an emergency fund. The financial advisor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%. The conditions for inference are met. What is the value of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

A- z = -1.62, P-value = 0.0526

It is claimed that 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 50 puppies is selected. It is discovered that 42 are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. A trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that greater than 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

A- z = 1.47, P-value = 0.0708

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let X represent the score on a randomly selected exam. The distribution of scores for one subject's standardized test is given in the table. What is the standard deviation of the distribution?

A-1.3

A researcher needs to assign 10 subjects, numbered 0 to 9, to one of two treatment groups: A and B. Use the table of random digits, starting with the first row and first column, to carry out the random assignment. Select the correct random assignment using the table.

A: 0, 7, 5, 8, 1 B: 3, 4, 2, 6, 9

A runner would like to know what percentage of people clean up after their dog while walking on public trails. For the next week, he keeps track every time he observes a person cleaning up after their dog (or not) while he runs on the public trail. He found that four out of 20 dog owners do not clean up after their dog. Which of the following conclusions can we draw from this study?

A: We can infer that about 25% of all dog owners do not clean up after their dog while walking on the public trail. B: We can draw conclusions about cause and effect for the population of all people who walk their dog on the public trail. We can conclude neither A nor B

The data points in the table show minutes on phone calls per day, x, and text messages sent per day, y. The least-squares regression line for the data is ŷ = 100 - 0.5x. Use this table to answer the question. Identify the missing values in the table.

A=5 B=0 C=50 D=-5

A real estate agent has 4 homes for sale: A, B, C, and D. Here are the listing prices. Home A: $150,000Home B: $250,000Home C: $190,000Home D: $550,000 The agent wants to randomly select 2 of the 4 homes to show in an open house this coming weekend. Which of the following gives a complete list of all possible samples of size 2 selected from this population of 4 homes without replacement?

AB, AC, AD, BC, BD, CD

The arm span and foot length were both measured (in centimeters) for each of 20 students in a biology class. The computer output displays the regression analysis. Which of the following is the best interpretation of the coefficient of determination r2?

About 37% of the variation in arm span is accounted for by the linear relationship formed with the foot length. About 65% of the variation in foot length is accounted for by the linear relationship formed with the arm span. About 63% of the variation in arm span is accounted for by the linear relationship formed with the foot length. -About 63% of the variation in foot length is accounted for by the linear relationship formed with the arm span.

The value of r2 for a relationship between gallons of gasoline used (explanatory) and the number of miles driven (response) by a certain car is calculated as 96.78%. Which of the following statements is the best interpretation of r2?

About 96.78% of the variation in the gallons of gasoline of the car is accounted for by the linear relationship created with the number of miles driven.

The table shows the production budgets and worldwide gross revenues of eight 2018 films. Which statement gives the correct value and interpretation of r?

As budgets increased, the gross revenue increased; r = 0.62.

A statistics student believes that black cars are less likely to receive tickets for moving violations. Black cars make up 19% of all cars manufactured. The student randomly selects 70 moving violation records and finds that 10 of them involved black cars. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, . What is the correct interpretation of this value?

Assuming the true proportion of black cars that receive moving violations is 0.19, there is a 24% probability that the sample proportion would be 0.15 or less by chance alone.

A certain oat cereal manufacturer boasts that adults who eat its cereal every day have lower cholesterol levels. To test this claim, a nurse measures the cholesterol levels of 18 patients. These patients are instructed to eat the oat cereal every day for four weeks. At the end of this four-week period, the nurse measures the cholesterol levels again. The differences in cholesterol levels (before - after) are listed. A negative difference means that a patient's cholesterol level increased over the four weeks. -18, 5, 9, -1, 0, 4, 3, -2, 0, 11, 5, 12, -5, 1, -3, 4, 8, 9 Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the test statistic for testing the hypotheses

B

A charity is holding a raffle to raise money. There is one car worth $30,000 and five $100 gift cards being raffled off. Each ticket costs $20, and there are a total of 5,000 tickets being sold. Which equation correctly depicts the calculation of the expected value for a ticket?

B

A computer company wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of defective computer chips in a day's production from two different production plants, A and B. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 100 chips from the first hour of production from plant A and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a random sample of 100 chips from the last hour of production from plant B and determines that there are 10 defective chips. Assuming conditions for inference are met, what is the 90% confidence interval for the true difference in proportions of defective chips from a day's production between the two plants?

B

A group of six students decides to conduct an experiment about "brain freeze," a phenomenon that often occurs when eating something cold. The students each flip a coin. If they flip heads, they eat a cup of Italian ice as fast as they can while sitting in an air-conditioned car. If they flip tails, they eat a cup of Italian ice as fast as they can while sitting outside in the sunshine. After a recovery period, they each complete the opposite treatment. The students record the amount of time it takes, in seconds, for them to experience brain freeze under each condition. The data are displayed in the table. What is the mean difference (sun - car) and the standard deviation of the differences?

B

A laundry detergent company wants to determine if a new formula of detergent, A, cleans better than the original formula, B. Researchers randomly assign 500 pieces of similarly soiled clothes to the two detergents, putting 250 pieces in each group. After washing the clothes, independent reviewers determine the cleanliness of the clothes on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the cleanest. The researchers calculate the proportion of clothes in each group that receive a rating of 7 or higher. For detergent A, 228 pieces of clothing received a 7 or higher. For detergent B, 210 pieces of clothing received a rating of 7 or higher. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the 90% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of clothes that receive a rating of 7 or higher for the two detergents?

B

A local athletic facility offers a four-week training course, hoping to increase athletes' running speeds. Thirty-five volunteer athletes are timed, in seconds, running a 50-yard dash before the training program begins and then again after the program is complete. The difference in running times (before training - after training) is calculated for each athlete. What are the hypotheses the facility should use?

B

A political candidate feels that she performed particularly well in the most recent debate against her opponent. Her campaign manager polled a random sample of 400 likely voters before the debate and a random sample of 500 likely voters after the debate. The 95% confidence interval for the true difference (post-debate minus pre-debate) in proportions of likely voters who would vote for this candidate was (-0.014, 0.064). What is the margin of error for this confidence interval?

B

A real estate agent has 4 homes for sale: A, B, C, and D. Here are the listing prices. Home A: $150,000Home B: $250,000Home C: $190,000Home D: $550,000 The agent wants to randomly select 2 of the 4 homes to show in an open house this coming weekend. This means the agent may show home A and B, A and C, A and D, B and C, B and D, or C and D. Which of the following gives the sampling distribution of the sample mean listing price for all possible samples of size 2 from this population of 4 homes?

B

A researcher is studying the relationship between fathers' and sons' heights. He collects a simple random sample of eight pairs of fathers and sons and records their heights as shown in the table. The equation of the least-squares regression line isŷ = 2.7 + 1.042x, where ŷ is each son's height and x is his father's height. Which shows the residual plot?

B

A student claims that statistics students at her school spend, on average, an hour doing statistics homework each night. In an attempt to substantiate this claim, she selects a random sample of 6 of the 62 students that are taking statistics currently and asks them how much time they spend completing statistics homework each night. Here are the data (in hours): 0.75, 0.75, 0.75, 0.5, 1, 1.25. She would like to know if the data provide convincing statistical evidence that the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night is less than one hour. The student plans to test the hypotheses, H0: μ = 1 versus Ha: μ < 1, where μ = the true mean amount of time that statistics students spend doing statistics homework each night. The conditions for inference are met. What are the appropriate test statistic and P-value?

B

A study found that 80% of teenagers use social media on a regular basis. John wants to investigate if the proportion of students at his large high school who use social media is different. He takes a random sample of 90 students and finds that 63 of them use social media on a regular basis. Which hypotheses would test if the proportion of students at his high school who use social media on a regular basis is different than 0.80?

B

Can a person train to become better at holding their breath? An experiment was designed to find out. Twelve volunteers were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups. The 6 volunteers assigned to group 1 were given breath-holding exercises to perform for 2 weeks. The other group was not given any information about the experiment. At the end of the 2 weeks, all 12 volunteers were individually tested to determine how long they could hold their breath. Here are the data (in seconds) Group 1: 90, 88, 70, 110, 75, 105 Group 2: 40, 48, 35, 50, 55, 62 The researcher would like to determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time volunteers who were given training held their breath is greater than the volunteers without training. The researcher tests H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 > 0, where μ1 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers who were given training held their breath and μ2 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers without training held their breath. The conditions for inference are met. What is the value of the test statistic for a t-test about a difference in means?

B

If a raffle has a winning prize of $100 and each ticket costs $5 with a total of 500 tickets sold, which equation would calculate the expected value?

B

It is believed that 80% of adults are honest. An honesty experiment was conducted on a random sample of 50 adults. It was discovered that 42 of the adults were honest. The researcher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that more than 80% of adults are honest. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

B

Katie selects a simple random sample of 25 students at her large school and finds that 5 of them are planning to try out for the soccer team next year. She wants to construct a confidence interval for p = the proportion of all students at her school who plan to try out for the soccer team next year, but she realizes she hasn't met all the conditions for constructing the interval. Which condition for this procedure has she failed to meet?

B

One professional basketball player typically attempts eight free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of eight. The distribution for X is shown in the table. Which of the following histograms correctly displays the distribution?

B

The daily temperatures in fall and winter months in Virginia have a mean of 62oF. A meteorologist in southwest Virginia believes the mean temperature is colder in this area. The meteorologist takes a random sample of 30 daily temperatures from the fall and winter months over the last five years in southwest Virginia. The mean temperature for the sample is 59oF with a standard deviation of 6.21oF. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean temperature in fall and winter months in southwest Virginia is less than 62o F? What hypotheses should the meteorologist use to conduct a significance test?

B

The data points in the table show (minutes on phone calls per day, text messages sent per day). The least-squares regression line for the data is ŷ = 100 - 0.5x. Which shows the residual plot? Use this table to answer the question.

B

The dotplot below displays the number of math classes taken by a random sample of 35 students at a high school. Which letter represents the approximate location of the mean number of math classes?

B

The owner of a computer company claims that the proportion of defective computer chips produced at plant A is higher than the proportion of defective chips produced by plant B. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 100 chips from production at plant A and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a random sample of 100 chips from production at plant B and determines that there are 10 defective chips. Let pA = the true proportion of defective chips from plant A and pB = the true proportion of defective chips from plant B. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the owner's claim?

B

The principal of a large high school wants to improve student test scores, so he asks one of his science teachers to try a new method of teaching. Thirty-one students take a pretest on the first day of science class. After 6 weeks using the new instruction, the same students take a posttest. The mean difference (posttest - pretest) in scores is 4.8 points with a standard deviation of 9.7 points. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the test statistic for testing the hypotheses ?

B

Twenty-four pairs of adult brothers and sisters were sampled at random from a population. The difference in heights, recorded in inches (brother's height minus sister's height), was calculated for each pair. The 95% confidence interval for the mean difference in heights for all brother-and-sister pairs in this population was (-0.76, 4.34). What is the margin of error for the confidence interval?

B

Which of the following displays is a relative frequency bar graph?

B

The histogram shows the resting pulse rates of students in a high school health class. Use the histogram to answer the questions. The most likely location for the mean of the data is - . The most likely location for the median of the data is -.

B B

The owner of a smart watch would like to estimate the mean number of steps they take per day. To do so, they select a random sample of 30 days from the previous year's data and record the number of steps they took on each of those days. The mean number of steps taken per day was 8,575 with a standard deviation of 2,125 steps. What is the value of the standard error of the mean?

B- 387.970

Twenty people who claimed to have trouble sleeping volunteered to participate in a sleep study. Half of them were randomly assigned to take 10 mg of melatonin 20 minutes before bed and the other half were randomly assigned to listen to soothing music when they went to bed. The volunteers adhered to their treatments for two weeks. At the end of two weeks, the individuals who listened to soothing music reported a greater improvement to their sleep than those who took melatonin. Which of the following conclusions can we draw from this study? A: We can make inferences based on the results of this study to the population of all people who have trouble sleeping. B: We can draw conclusions about cause and effect for people like those who participated in the study.

B only

A teacher attempts to make a number cube unfair by drilling out the spots on one side and inserting lead weights. To determine if she was successful, she rolls the number cube 50 times and keeps track of the number of times she rolls a 1. She rolls a 1 15 times. She would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of rolls that will land on a 1 is greater than one-sixth. Are the conditions for inference met?

B or D

A teacher wants to estimate the mean height of seniors who attend a large high school. He randomly selects 35 students from this school and records the height, in inches, of these students. The average height is 65.3 inches with a standard deviation of 3.6 inches. Which of the following is the 95% confidence interval for the true mean height of students at this school?

B- (64.06, 66.54)

A group of students is writing a phone message app to provide better word suggestions based on the context of the word and the words the person used in the past. They will earn an A on the project if their teacher is convinced that their program suggests the correct word at least 54% of the time. The current success rate for this app is 54%. The teacher randomly selects 100 words and finds that the students' program correctly suggests 64 of the words. To determine if this data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of correct words is more than 54%, 150 trials of a simulation are conducted. The results are shown in the dotplot. The teacher is testing the hypotheses: H0: p = 54% and Ha: p > 54%, where p = the true proportion of words the app will correctly predict. Based on the results of the simulation, what is the estimate of the P-value of the test?

B- 0.02

An auto body shop receives 70% of its parts from one manufacturer. If parts from the shop are selected at random, what is the probability that the first part not from this manufacturer is the 6th part selected?

B- 0.0504

The weights of bunches of bananas in the grocery store are Normally distributed with a mean weight of 3.54 pounds and a standard deviation of 0.64 pounds. A random sample of four bunches is taken and the mean weight is recorded. Which of the following is the standard deviation of the sampling distribution for the mean of all possible samples of size four?

B- 0.32

Dan and Glenn are swimming buddies who love to challenge themselves while diving. The amount of time Dan can hold his breath underwater, D, is 111 seconds with a standard deviation of 12.5 seconds. The amount of time Glenn can hold his breath underwater, G, is 105 seconds with a standard deviation of 10.9 seconds. Assume that D and G are independent random variables and X = D - G. What is the probability that on any given dive Dan holds his breath for less time than Glenn?

B- 0.359

What is the z* critical value for constructing a 95% confidence interval for a proportion?

B- 1.96

The times to pop a regular bag of microwave popcorn without burning it are Normally distributed with a mean time of 140 seconds and a standard deviation of 20 seconds. The times to pop a mini bag of microwave popcorn, without burning it, are Normally distributed with a mean time of 90 seconds and a standard deviation of 15 seconds. Suppose two independent random samples, 25 of each, are taken and the mean popping times are calculated. Let R = the popping time of a randomly selected regular-sized bag and M = the popping time of a mini-sized bag. Which of the following best describes the mean of the sampling distribution of ?

B- 50

A local school board wants to determine if the proportion of households in the district that would support starting the school year a week earlier has changed from the previous year. Last year, the school board determined that 65% of households supported starting school earlier. They ask a random sample of 100 households this year, and 70% state they would support starting the school year earlier. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, , is 0.29. What is the correct interpretation of this value?

B- Assuming 65% of households would support starting school earlier, there is a 0.29 probability of getting a sample proportion of 0.70 or more different from 0.65.

A political pollster claims that 55% of voters prefer candidate A. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 75 voters is polled. The pollster finds that 39 of those polled prefer candidate A. He would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all voters who prefer candidate A is less than 55%. The P-value of this test is 0.3015. Interpret the P-value.

B- Assuming that the true population proportion of voters who prefer candidate A is 0.55, the probability of obtaining a sample statistic of 0.52 or less in a random sample of 75 voters is 0.3015.

It is believed that 80% of adults are honest. An honesty experiment was conducted on a random sample of 50 adults. It was discovered that 42 of the adults were honest. The researcher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that more than 80% of adults are honest. The standardized test statistic is z = 0.71 and the P-value is 0.2389. What conclusion should be made using the = 0.10 significance level?

B- Because the P-value is greater than = 0.10, there is not convincing evidence that more than 80% of adults are honest.

Consider the given probability histogram of a binomial random variable. What are the center and shape of the distribution?

B- Center: 2.4Shape: skewed right

A school guidance counselor is concerned that a greater proportion of high school students are working part-time jobs during the school year than a decade ago. A decade ago, 28% of high school students worked a part-time job during the school year. To investigate whether the proportion is greater today, a random sample of 80 high school students is selected. It is discovered that 37.5% of them work part-time jobs during the school year. The guidance counselor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all high school students who work a part-time job during the school year is greater than 0.28. What are the appropriate hypotheses for this test?

B- H0: p = 0.28 versus Ha: p > 0.28, where p = the proportion of all high school students who work a part-time job during the school year.

According to a soccer coach, 75% of soccer players have had at least one sprained ankle. An athletic trainer would like to investigate this claim. To do so, the trainer selects a random sample of 125 college soccer players from across the country and finds that 99 of them have had at least one sprained ankle. The trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of college soccer players who have had at least one sprained ankle is greater than 75%. What are the appropriate hypotheses for this test?

B- H0: p = 0.75 versus Ha: p > 0.75, where p = the true proportion of all college soccer players who have had at least one sprained ankle.

An engineer would like to design a parking garage in the most cost-effective manner. He reads that the average height of pickup trucks, which is the largest type of vehicle that should be expected to fit into the parking garage, is 76.4 inches. To double-check this figure, the engineer employs a statistician. The statistician selects a random sample of 100 trucks and finds the mean height of the sample to be 77.1 inches with a standard deviation of 5.2 inches. The statistician will determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean height of all trucks is greater than 76.4 inches. What are the appropriate hypotheses?

B- H0: μ = 76.4 versus Ha: μ > 76.4, where μ = the true mean height of all trucks

A student claims that professional male basketball players are taller, on average, than college male basketball players. To investigate this claim, the student selects a random sample of 30 professional basketball players and 30 college basketball players. The mean height of the sample of professional male basketball players is 76 inches with a standard deviation of 3.5 inches. The mean height of the sample of college male basketball players is 74.5 inches with a standard deviation of 5.5 inches. The student would like to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean height of all professional male basketball players is greater than the true mean height of all college male basketball players. Let μ1 = the true mean height of all professional male basketball players and μ2 = the true mean height of all college male basketball players. What are the appropriate hypotheses?

B- H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 > 0

Can a person train to become better at holding their breath? An experiment was designed to find out. Twelve volunteers were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups. The 6 volunteers assigned to group 1 were given breath-holding exercises to perform for 2 weeks. The other group was not given any information about the experiment. At the end of the 2 weeks, all 12 volunteers were individually tested to determine how long they could hold their breath. Here are the data (in seconds). Group 1: 90, 88, 70, 110, 75, 105 Group 2: 40, 48, 35, 50, 55, 62 The researcher would like to determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time volunteers who were given training held their breath is greater than volunteers without training. Let μ1 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers who were given training held their breath and μ2 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers without training held their breath. What are the appropriate hypotheses?

B- H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 > 0

Jocelyn believes that the amount of sleep she tends to get on weekends differs from the amount of sleep she tends to get during the school week. To investigate this claim, she randomly selects 10 weekend days and 10 school days. She consults her smart watch to determine the number of hours she slept for each of the selected days. Here are the data. School week: 7, 7.5, 8, 6.5, 8, 7.5, 7, 6.5, 7, 8 Weekend: 9.5, 9.5, 8.25, 8.5, 7.5, 10.25, 8, 7, 9.5, 10 Jocelyn would like to determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of sleep she gets on weekends differs from the true mean amount of sleep she gets during the school week. Let μW = the true mean amount of sleep Jocelyn gets on weekends and μS = the true mean amount of sleep she gets during the school week. What are the appropriate hypotheses?

B- H0: μS - μW = 0, Ha: μS - μW ≠ 0

A trainer would like to estimate the number of runs of the same length and same speed it takes for an individual's body to adjust to the activity. To do this, the trainer selects a random sample of 30 adults who do not currently run and assigns them to run 1 mile at a 12-minute pace every day until they can do so easily. The trainer finds that the standard error of the mean is 2.2 days. What is the interpretation of the standard error of the mean?

B- If we select many random samples of adults who do not currently run and assign them to this training program, the sample mean amount of time needed to adjust to this workout would typically vary by about 2.2 days from the population mean.

A bottled water company bottles varying sizes of water, from 8-ounce to 1-gallon containers. The company has determined that the mean quantity in their 20-ounce bottles is 20.8 ounces with a standard deviation of 0.6 ounces. The bottling plant manager believes his machines are overfilling the bottles. A random sample of 30 bottles is taken, and the mean number of ounces of water is determined to be 21. Under the assumption that the true mean ounces of water is 20.8, 100 simulated means for samples of size 30 are shown in the dotplot What does the dot above 21 represent?

B- In one simulated random sample of 30 bottles of water, the mean number of ounces was 21

A cell phone manufacturer would like to estimate the mean difference in battery lifespan for a phone in full-power versus power-saver mode. They randomly select eight phones and determine the battery lifespan, in hours, for each phone using each power mode. A 90% confidence interval for the true mean difference (full power - low power) in battery life is 5.42 hours to 6.71 hours. A journalist claims that battery lifespan is, on average, 5 hours longer when the phone is used under low-power mode as opposed to full-power mode. Is this claim supported by the 90% confidence interval?

B- No, 5 is not a plausible value in the 90% confidence interval.

A statistics student wants to survey a high school of 910 students concerning support for increasing the number of student parking spots. The student randomly selects 100 students to construct a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of students who support increasing the number of student parking spots, and finds that 77 students are in support. Are the conditions for inference met?

B- No, the 10% condition is not met.

A teacher claims that 55% of her statistics students have a strong understanding of inference for one proportion. To investigate this claim she randomly selects 25 of her 50 statistics students and provides them with an inference problem about one proportion. Of the 25 selected students, 14 demonstrate a strong understanding of inference for one proportion. The teacher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that more than 55% of her students have a strong understanding of this topic. Are the conditions for inference met?

B- No, the 10% condition is not met.

The cafeteria manager at a high school that has 910 students and 75 teachers is considering adding a baked potato bar to the lunch menu. The manager randomly surveys 90 students and 25 teachers, and finds that 50 of the 90 students and 13 of the 25 teachers would purchase from the potato bar. The manager constructs a 99% confidence interval for the difference in the proportions of students and teachers who would purchase lunch on the day the potato bar option is available. Are the conditions for inference met?

B- No, the 10% condition is not met.

A student at a large high school wants to estimate the number of texts seniors send, on average, each day. This student randomly selects 15 seniors at this school and asks them how many texts they sent yesterday. Use the data to construct a 95% confidence interval to estimate the true mean number of texts seniors at this school send each day. 26, 28, 33, 45, 45, 53, 57, 58, 60, 62, 66, 80, 90, 115, 150 Have the conditions for inference been met?

B- No, the graph of the data shows skewness and has at least one outlier

A college professor would like to estimate the difference in the mean amount of time spent completing a particular homework assignment by the top students in her large lecture hall literature class and the students in this class who do not perform as well. She identifies the three students in the class with the highest grades and the three students in the class with the lowest grades and asks each of them how long it took them to complete the particular homework assignment. Although the sample sizes are small, the distribution of the amount of time spent to complete the assignment by the students in each sample shows no signs of strong skewness or outliers. Are the conditions for inference met?

B- No, the random condition is not met for both samples.

A researcher is 95% confident that the interval from 5.2 hours to 7.8 hours captures the true mean amount of time it takes to fully charge a battery pack. Is it plausible that the true mean number of hours to charge all battery packs of this type may be 5?

B- No, this is not a plausible value for the population mean, because 5 is not within the 95% confidence interval.

A government agency constructs a 95% confidence interval to estimate the mean amount of pollution in a city's river. Assume that all conditions have been met. The one-sample t-interval is (1.26, 3.91). Water with 4.00 units of pollution or more, on average, of this type of measure is said to be contaminated. Is it reasonable to believe that this city's river is contaminated?

B- No. Because the interval representing the mean amount of pollution is entirely below 4.00, it is reasonable to believe the river is not contaminated.

Hannah has a chicken coop with six hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a random day. The distribution for X is given in the table. Which of the following represents the probability of the hens laying at least four eggs?

B- P(X ≥ 4)

A study was conducted to determine the true mean hourly wage of all working high school students. A 95% confidence interval for the true mean hourly wage of high school students is ($6.50, $13.00). Based upon this interval, what conclusion should be made about the hypotheses: = 15 versus where = the true mean hourly income of all working high school students at α = 0.05?

B- Reject H0. Since 15 falls outside the 95% confidence interval, there is convincing evidence that the true mean hourly income of all working high school students is different than $15.

The amount of time it takes students to travel to school can vary greatly depending on how far a student lives from the school and what mode of transportation they take to school. A student claims that the average travel time to school for his large district is 20 minutes. To further investigate this claim, he selects a random sample of 50 students from the school and finds that their mean travel time is 22.4 minutes with a standard deviation of 5.9 minutes. He would like to conduct a significance test to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean travel time for all students who attend this school is greater than 20 minutes. The student would like to test H0: μ = 20 versus Ha: μ > 20, where μ = the true mean travel time for all students who attend this school. The conditions for inference are met. The test statistic is t = 2.88 and the P-value is between 0.0025 and 0.005. What conclusion should be made at the significance level, ?

B- Reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the true mean travel time for all students who attend this school is greater than 20 minutes.

A study seeks to estimate the difference in the mean fuel economy (measured in miles per gallon) for vehicles under two treatments: driving with underinflated tires versus driving with properly inflated tires. To quantify this difference, the manufacturer randomly selects 12 cars of the same make and model from the assembly line and then randomly assigns six of the cars to be driven 500 miles with underinflated tires and the other six cars to be driven 500 miles with properly inflated tires. A 90% confidence interval for the true difference in the mean fuel economy for cars of this make and model driven with underinflated tires versus properly inflated tires is -3.339 mpg to -0.585 mpg. Interpret this interval.

B- The manufacturer can be 95% confident that the interval from -3.339 to -0.585 captures the true mean difference in fuel economy (underinflated - properly inflated).

A refrigeration unit at a restaurant is supposed to be kept at 40°F. An inspector would like to test the hypotheses = 40 versus 40 where μ = the true mean temperature for all times of the day. A 98% confidence interval based upon a random sample of 40 temperatures is 40.5 degrees to 42.1 degrees. Using the interval, what decision should be made?

B- The null hypothesis should be rejected at the = 0.02 level.

A professional basketball player typically attempts 8 free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of 8. The distribution for X is shown in the table. Which is the correct interpretation of the standard deviation?

B- The number of free throws made out of 8 typically varies from the expected value by 1.4 free throws.

The mean weight for a typical bunch of bananas in grocery stores is 3.54 pounds. The owner of a grocery store will reject a shipment of bananas if the mean weight of the banana bunches is less than 3.54 pounds. The owner randomly selects and weighs 30 bunches of bananas. A significance test at an alpha level of tests the hypotheses pounds; pounds. What is the consequence of a Type II error in this situation?

B- The owner accepts a shipment of bananas that has a mean weight less than 3.54 pounds.

The owner of a popular coffee shop believes that customers who drink espresso are less likely to use their own cup compared with customers who drink coffee. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all espresso purchases and 50 receipts from all coffee purchases. For espresso purchases, 15 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed the customer used their own cup. Let pEspresso= the true proportion of customers who drink espresso and use their own cup and pCoffeee = the true proportion of customers who drink coffee and use their own cup. The P-value for this significance test is 0.033. Which of the following is the correct conclusion for this test of the hypotheses

B- The owner should reject the null hypothesis since 0.033 < 0.05. There is convincing evidence that the true proportion of customers who drink espresso and use their own cup is significantly less than the true proportion of customers who drink coffee and use their own cup.

A headache medication is supposed to contain 500 mg of active ingredient. A researcher would like to test the hypotheses =500 versus 500 where μ = the true amount of active ingredient for all pills. A 99% confidence interval based on a random sample of 60 pills is (505, 511). Based on the interval, what decision should be made at α = 0.01?

B- The researcher should reject the null hypothesis because 500 falls outside the 99% confidence interval.

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportion of red beads are the same in each container. The students believe the proportions are different. Each student shakes the first container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contain 13 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Let p1= the true proportion of red beads in container 1 and p2= the true proportion of red beads in container 2. The P-value for this significance test is 0.171. Which of the following is the correct conclusion for this test of the hypotheses level?

B- The student should fail to reject the null hypothesis since 0.171 > 0.05. There is insufficient evidence that the true proportion of red beads is significantly different between the two containers.

The mean weight for a typical bunch of bananas in grocery stores is 3.54 pounds. Quinn believes the weights of the bananas at the local grocery store this year are different. He randomly selects and weighs 30 bunches of bananas for which the mean weight is 3.27 pounds and the standard deviation is 0.89 pounds. A significance test at an alpha level of produces a P-value of 0.107. What is the correct interpretation of the P-value?

B- There is a 10.7% chance that a sample mean of 3.27 pounds or one more extreme will occur by chance if the true mean weight is 3.54 pounds.

Miguel Cabrera has had 369 at bats, and he has 127 hits and 21 home runs. (Note: The home runs are included in the hits data.) If he is challenged to a batting battle, what is the expected score of each at bat if he earns 1 point for each hit that is not a home run and 5 points for each home run?

C- 0.57

A doctor would like to estimate the mean difference in height of pairs of identical twins. The doctor randomly selects 8 pairs of identical twins and determines the current height, in inches, of each twin. The data are displayed in the table. A 95% confidence interval for the mean difference (twin 1 - twin 2) in height is (-0.823, 0.573). Based on the confidence interval, is it reasonable to claim there is no difference in the heights of twins?

B- Yes, 0 is contained in the 95% confidence interval

A racecar driver has a 0.05 probability of winning any given race in a season. There are 16 races in a season, and whether or not the driver wins one race is independent of whether he wins any other race. Let X represent the number of races the driver wins in the season. Have the conditions for a binomial setting been met for this scenario?

B- Yes, all four conditions in BINS have been met.

A school newspaper article claims that the mean weight of student backpacks is 20 pounds. A student of this school would like to test the hypotheses = 20 versus where = the true mean weight of all backpacks. A 95% confidence interval based upon a random sample of 50 students is (18.5, 19.75). Using the interval, can the researcher reject the null hypothesis?

B- Yes, the null hypothesis can be rejected at the significance level = 0.05 because 20 is not contained in the 95% confidence interval.

A certain size of tires is supposed to be inflated to 35 psi. The owner of a vehicle repair shop would like to test the hypotheses =35 versus 35 where μ = the true mean tire pressure for all customers with this tire size. A 90% confidence interval based upon a random sample of 40 customers is (32.1, 34.3). Using the interval, can the owner reject the null hypothesis?

B- Yes, the null hypothesis can be rejected at the significance level α = 0.10 because 35 is not contained in the 90% confidence interval.

In a large high school, 37% of the teachers believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. However, 89% of the students believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Let and be the sample proportions of teachers and students, respectively, who believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Suppose 28 teachers and 100 students are selected at random and asked their opinion on the amount of time students have to change class. Which of the following is the correct shape and justification of the sampling distribution of ?

B- approximately Normal because the expected number of successes and failures for each sample are all at least 10

The owner of an apple orchard wants to estimate the mean weight of the apples in the orchard. She takes a random sample of 30 apples, records their weights, and calculates the mean weight of the sample. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

B- one-sample t-interval for u

A student wants to determine if the proportion of times a spun penny lands on heads is different from 0.5. She spins a penny 50 times and records the number of times it lands on heads. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

B- one-sample z-test for p

The mayor of a large town wants to determine if a majority of the households in the town support a proposal. The mayor's assistant randomly selects 100 households and asks whether they would support the mayor's proposal. Sixty households responded that they would. Is there evidence that a majority of the households would support the proposal? What is the appropriate inference procedure?

B- one-sample z-test for p

What critical value of t* should be used for a 80% confidence interval for the population mean based on a random sample of 38 observations?

B- t* = 1.310

What critical value of t* should be used for a 99% confidence interval for the population mean based on a random sample of 34 observations?

B- t* = 2.750

A company would like to estimate the effectiveness of two dish detergents using cleanliness ratings. Fifty dirty dishes are randomly selected and randomly divided into two groups. In one group, each dirty dish will be placed in a container of hot water with Brand A detergent and in the other group, each dirty dish will be placed in a container of hot water with Brand B detergent. The dishes will sit for two hours, and then the cleanliness of the dishes will be measured using a scale of 1-10 (1 = the least clean and 10 = most clean). The difference in mean cleanliness ratings for the two detergents (A - B) will then be calculated. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

B- two-sample t-interval for UA-UB

A television newscaster from a 24-hour news station wants to estimate the number of hours per day its viewers watch programming on this channel. The newscaster randomly selects 100 viewers and asks them how many hours per day they watch this station. The newscaster constructs an 85% confidence interval for the true mean number of hours viewers watch this station. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

B- using a sample of size 200

A principal at a large high school wants to estimate the number of days freshmen regularly ride the bus to school. The principal randomly selects 35 freshmen and asks them how many days per week they ride the school bus. The principal constructs a 90% confidence interval for the true mean number of days freshmen ride the bus to school per week. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

B- using a sample of size 40

An experiment is conducted to estimate the difference in work productivity for employees under two conditions: with and without music playing in the background. Twenty employees volunteered to be part of the study. Ten of the volunteers were randomly assigned to work for one week with music playing in the background. The other 10 volunteers worked for one week without music playing in the background. Productivity is measured by counting the number of units produced for the week. A 99% confidence interval for the difference in the population means, without music - with music, is (1.525, 7.275). Does the confidence interval support the claim that employees who listen to music while working are less productive than employees who work without listening to music?

B- yes because the confidence interval consists entirely of positive numbers

It is common knowledge that a fair penny will land heads up 50% of the time and tails up 50% of the time. It is very unlikely for a penny to land on its edge when flipped, so a probability of 0 is assigned to this outcome. A curious student suspects that 5 pennies glued together will land on their edge 50% of the time. To investigate this claim, the student securely glues together 5 pennies and flips the penny stack 100 times. Of the 100 flips, the penny stack lands on its edge 46 times. The student would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge differs from 0.5. The conditions for inference are met. What is the value of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

B- z = -0.80, P-value = 0.4238

A store manager claims that 60% of shoppers who enter her store make a purchase. To investigate this claim, she selects a random sample of 40 customers and finds that 40% of them make a purchase. She wants to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all customers entering her store who make a purchase differs from 60%. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

B- z = -2.58, P-value = 0.0098

It is claimed that 95% of teenagers who have a cell phone never leave home without it. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 300 teenagers who have a cell phone was selected. It was discovered that 273 of the teenagers in the sample never leave home without their cell phone. One question of interest is whether the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who never leave home without a cell phone is less than 95%. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

B- z = -3.18, P-value = 0.0007

To be considered 18-karat (18K) gold, a piece of jewelry must be made of 75% pure gold. The higher the karats, the more valuable a piece of jewelry. A jewelry designer is purchasing a large quantity of 18K gold from a new supplier. To see if the new supplier is being dishonest about the karat rating in the shipment, the designer melts a random sample of the gold and conducts a hypothesis test with H0: The proportion of metal that is gold is 75%, and Ha: The proportion of metal that is gold is less than 75%. What is a Type II error and its consequence in this context?

B-The gold shipment truly is made of less than 75% gold, but the designer concludes that it is made of 75% gold. The designer will accept the shipment of gold and produce inferior jewelry.

A statistics student believes that black cars are less likely to receive tickets for moving violations. Black cars make up 19% of all cars manufactured. The student randomly selects 70 moving violation records and finds that 10 of them involved black cars. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.24. What is the correct conclusion given ?

Because the P-value is greater than 0.05, the student should fail to reject H0.

A popular restaurant chain will open a new franchise if a study shows that more than 60% of residents in an area would purchase food from the restaurant. An analyst of a particular area randomly selects 500 residents and surveys them about their interest in the restaurant. Of the 500 residents, 320 stated they would purchase food from the restaurant. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.03. What is the correct conclusion given ?

Because the P-value is less than 0.05 , the analyst should reject H0.

A computer company wants to determine if the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production is more than 10%. A quality control specialist randomly selects 200 chips from a day's production and finds that 30 chips are defective. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.009. What is the correct conclusion given ?

Because the P-value is less than 0.05, the specialist should reject H0.

Simone read online that the failure rate in Arizona for the first attempt of the written driver's test is 60%. Simone thinks the Arizona rate is less than 60%. To investigate, she selects an SRS of 50 Arizona drivers and finds that 27 failed their first written driving test. To determine if this provides convincing evidence that the failure rate for Arizona is less than 60%, 200 trials of a simulation are conducted. Simone's hypotheses are: H0: p = 60% and Ha: p < 60%, where p = the true proportion of Arizona drivers who fail the first attempt of the written driver's test. Based on the results of the simulation, the estimated P-value of this test is 0.035. Using α = 0.01, what conclusion should Simone reach?

Because the P-value of 0.035 > α, Simone should fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the Arizona written driver's test has a true first-attempt failure rate less than 60%.

Lucy recently asked the servers at her restaurant to only give straws to customers who request them. She thinks that about half of the customers will ask for straws but hopes that the rate will be less than half. She randomly selects 100 customers and finds that 43 of them ask for a straw. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of customers who will ask for a straw is less than 50%, 150 trials of a simulation are conducted. Lucy is testing the hypotheses: H0: p = 50% and Ha: p < 50%, where p = the true proportion of customers who will ask for a straw. Based on the results of the simulation, the estimated P-value is 0.0733. Using ∝ = 0.05, what conclusion should Lucy reach?

Because the P-value of 0.0733 > , Lucy should fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the proportion of customers who will ask for a straw is less than 50%.

Graduation rate is one measure used to compare colleges in national publications. One such publication compared semester tuition against graduation rate, defined as the percentage of students who graduate within four years. The value of r for the scatterplot is 0.856. Which statement best describes how the circled point influences the correlation shown in the scatterplot?

Because the point lies outside the linear trend, it weakens the correlation.

A tennis court official selects a random sample of 50 tennis balls that were slated for use in a highly contested match. He randomly assigns half of them to be subjected to 90 degree heat to replicate the presumed temperature at match time. The other half are run through a machine that replicates the action of hitting the ball 500 times. After the treatments, he inspects the balls for wear and tear. Which of the following conclusions can we draw from this study? A: We can make inferences based on the results of this study for the population of all tennis balls slated for use in the match. B: We can draw conclusions about cause and effect for the population of tennis balls slated for use in the match.

Both A and B

A sunscreen manufacturer tests a new water-resistant sunscreen by finding 120 volunteers at a community pool. The subjects are randomly assigned to one of two groups by drawing either a 1 or 2 marked on slips of equal-sized paper from a bag. Half of the subjects use an old formulation, and half use the new formulation over an 8-hour time frame on the same sunny day. Test administrators apply a measured amount of sunscreen to each subject at the beginning of the day and reapply it at regular intervals throughout the day. Test subjects are asked to remain in unshaded areas as much as possible during the test. The levels of sunburn are compared at the end of the day. Which of the following accurately describes the benefit, if any, of control in the experiment?

By controlling variables that may influence the response variable, we reduce variability in the response variable.

A computer company wants to determine if the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production is more than 10%. A quality control specialist randomly selects 200 chips from a day's production and finds that 24 chips are defective. Which hypotheses would test if the proportion of defective chips is more than 10%?

C

A local school board believes there is a difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 38 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. Let ps = the true proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week early and pW = the true proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the school board's claim?

C

A local school board wants to determine the proportion of households in the district that would support a proposal to start the school year a week earlier. They ask a random sample of 100 households whether they would support the proposal, and 62 households stated that they would. Assuming that conditions have been met, what is the 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of households that would support the proposal

C

A local school board wants to estimate the difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 30 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 90% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of households that would support starting the school year a week earlier?

C

A music professor is interested in the effects of listening to music while memorizing a list of words. She asks 14 volunteers to memorize two different lists of words: one list while listening to music in the background and the other list with no music in the background. The order of the treatments is determined by a coin toss. The mean difference (music - no music) in the number of words memorized is 4.1 words with a standard deviation of 3.8 words. Assuming that the conditions for inference are met, what is the test statistic for testing the hypotheses

C

A political pollster claims that 55% of voters prefer candidate A. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 75 voters is polled. The pollster finds that 39 of those polled prefer candidate A. He would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all voters who prefer candidate A is less than 55%. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

C

A school guidance counselor is concerned that a greater proportion of high school students are working part-time jobs during the school year than a decade ago. A decade ago, 28% of high school students worked a part-time job during the school year. To investigate whether the proportion is greater today, a random sample of 80 high school students is selected. It is discovered that 37.5% of them work part-time jobs during the school year. The guidance counselor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all high school students that work a part-time job during the school year is greater than 0.28. The conditions for inference are met. What is the value of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

C

A student wants to survey the sophomore class of 200 students about whether the school should require uniforms. A random sample of 50 sophomores is surveyed and asked whether they support the school adopting uniforms. Of the 50 sophomores, 12 say they would favor school uniforms. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of sophomores who favor the adoption of uniforms?

C

A study seeks to estimate the difference in the mean fuel economy (measured in miles per gallon) for vehicles under two treatments: driving with underinflated tires versus driving with properly inflated tires. To quantify this difference, the manufacturer randomly selects 12 cars of the same make and model from the assembly line and then randomly assigns six of the cars to be driven 500 miles with underinflated tires and the other six cars to be driven 500 miles with properly inflated tires. Here are summary statistics and dotplots of the results: What is the correct 90% confidence interval for the true difference in the population means (underinflated - properly inflated)? Use the conservative df.

C

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportion of red beads is the same for both containers. The students believe the proportions are different. Each student shakes the first container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contained 10 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Let p1= the true proportion of red beads in container 1 and p2= the true proportion of red beads in container 2. Which of the following is the correct standardized test statistic and P-value for the hypotheses,

C

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportion of red beads is the same in each container. The students believe the proportions are different. Each student shakes the first container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contained 10 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Let p1 = the true proportion of red beads in container 1 and p2 = the true proportion of red beads in container 2. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the students' claim?

C

In a statistics activity, students are asked to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of times that a spinning penny will land with tails up, and the proportion of times a spinning dime will land tails up. The students are instructed to spin the penny and the dime 30 times and record the number of times they land tails up. For one student, the penny lands tails side up 18 times, and the dime lands tails side up 20 times. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the 98% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of tails side up for a penny and a dime?

C

The distribution of the heights of five-year-old children has a mean of 42.5 inches. A pediatrician believes the five-year-old children in a city are taller on average. The pediatrician selects a random sample of 40 five-year-old children and measures their heights. The mean height of the sample is 44.1 inches with a standard deviation of 3.5 inches. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean height of five-year-old children in this city is greater than 42.5 inches? What hypotheses should the pediatrician use to conduct a significance test?

C

The distribution of the heights of five-year-old children has a mean of 42.5 inches. A pediatrician believes the five-year-old children in a city are taller on average. The pediatrician selects a random sample of 40 five-year-old children and measures their heights. The mean height of the sample is 44.1 inches with a standard deviation of 3.5 inches. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean height of five-year-old children in this city is greater than 42.5 inches? What is the test statistic for this significance test?

C

The nutrition supervisor for a school district is considering adding a baked potato bar to the lunch menu for all the high school cafeterias. He wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of students who would purchase from the potato bar for two high schools, East and West. The cafeteria manager at each high school randomly surveys 90 students. At East High School, 63 of the students say they would purchase from the potato bar. At West High School, 58 students say they would. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 99% confidence interval for the difference in proportion of students from the two schools who would purchase from the potato bar?

C

The owner of a computer company claims that the proportion of defective computer chips produced at plant A is higher than the proportion of defective chips produced by plant B. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 80 chips from production at plant A and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a random sample of 90 chips from production at plant B and determines that there are 10 defective chips. Let pA = the true proportion of defective chips from plant A and pB = the true proportion of defective chips from plant B. Which of the following is the correct standardized test statistic for the hypotheses,

C

The owner of a computer company claims that the proportion of defective computer chips produced at plant A is higher than the proportion of defective chips produced by plant B. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 80 chips from production at plant A and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a random sample of 90 chips from production at plant B and determines that there are 10 defective chips. Let pA = the true proportion of defective chips from plant A and pB = the true proportion of defective chips from plant B. Which of the following is the correct standardized test statistic for the hypotheses, ?

C

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase. The owner determines the probabilities based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is given in the table. Which of the following histograms correctly displays the distribution?

C

Two students want to determine whose paper airplane model can fly the farthest. To put their models to the test, they recruit five friends to participate in a study. Because the friends have varying throwing abilities, the students decide to have each friend throw each model of airplane. To determine which paper airplane each friend throws first, a coin is tossed. The data are displayed in the table, which shows how far each airplane flies to the nearest inch. What is the mean difference (B - A) and the standard deviation of the differences?

C

When spinning a penny, Claire believes the proportion of times the penny lands on heads is not 0.5. She spins a penny 50 times and it lands on heads 30 times. Which hypotheses would test Claire's claim?

C

Which scatterplot corresponds to the residual plot?

C

The graph displays people's favorite holidays in relation to their housing arrangement. Which statement is true?

Holiday preference and housing status are associated because the percentage of people who favor each holiday differs by housing status.

A company makes a product and has no way to determine which ones are faulty until an unhappy customer returns it. Three percent of the products are faulty and will cost the company $200 each in customer service and repairs. If the company does not refund the customer when repairing the item, how much should the company charge to make a profit of $2.00 per item?

C- $8

The power of a significance test to reject the null hypothesis when a particular value of the alternative is true is 0.8. What is the probability that this test results in a Type II error?

C- 0.20

The manager of a movie theater is standing outside the theater complex one evening. He will be asking the moviegoers questions.

How much did you spend at the movies today?

The distribution of tips given by customers who buy only a cup of coffee is bimodal with a mean of $0.29 and a standard deviation of $0.116. The distribution of tips given by customers who buy only a salad is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of $2.89 and a standard deviation of $1.18. If a random sample of 35 tips from customers who buy only a cup of coffee is selected and a random sample of 20 customers who buy only a salad is selected, what is the probability of a sample mean being at least $2.50 more for customers who buy only a salad than for those who buy only a cup of coffee?

C- 0.6781

A professional basketball player typically attempts 8 free throws per game. Let X represent the number of free throws made out of 8. The distribution for X is shown in the table. What is the expected value of the distribution?

C- 4.8

A student believes that a certain 6-sided number cube, with the numbers 1 to 6, is unfair and is more likely to land with a 6 facing up. The student rolls the cube 100 times and lands with 6 facing up 20 times. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, H0:p=0.17 and Ha:p>0.17, is 0.19. What is the correct interpretation of this value?

C- Assuming 0.17 is the true proportion of the cube landing with a 6 facing up, this sample proportion can be expected by chance 19% of the time.

According to a soccer coach, 75% of soccer players have had at least one sprained ankle. An athletic trainer would like to investigate this claim. To do so, the trainer selects a random sample of 125 college soccer players from across the country and finds that 99 of them have had at least one sprained ankle. The trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of college soccer players who have had at least one sprained ankle is greater than 75%. The computer output gives the results of a z-test for one proportion. What decision should be made at the α = 0.05 level?

C- Because the P-value > α = 0.05, the correct decision is to fail to reject H0.

An emergency fund is defined as a savings account that has a balance equal to at least two months' living expenses. An article in a financial magazine claims that 80% of American adults do not have an emergency fund. To investigate this claim, a financial advisor selects a random sample of 150 Americans and finds that 112 do not have an emergency fund. The financial advisor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%. The financial advisor tests the hypotheses H0: p = 0.80 versus Ha: p < 0.80, where p = the true proportion of all American adults that do not have an emergency fund. The conditions for inference are met. The standardized test statistic is z = -1.62 and the P-value is 0.0526. What conclusion should the financial advisor make using the α = 0.05 significance level?

C- Because the P-value is greater than α = 0.05, there is not convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who do not have an emergency fund is less than 80%.

It is common knowledge that a fair penny will land heads up 50% of the time and tails up 50% of the time. It is very unlikely for a penny to land on its edge when flipped, so a probability of 0 is assigned to this outcome. A curious student suspects that 5 pennies glued together will land on their edge 50% of the time. To investigate this claim, the student securely glues together 5 pennies and flips the penny stack 100 times. Of the 100 flips, the penny stack lands on its edge 46 times. The student would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge differs from 0.5. The student tests the hypotheses H0: p = 0.50 versus Ha: p ≠ 0.50, where p = the true proportion of all flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge. The conditions for inference are met. The standardized test statistic is z = -0.80 and the P-value is 0.2119. What conclusion should the student make using the α = 0.10 significance level?

C- Because the P-value is greater than α = 0.10, there is not convincing evidence that the true proportion of flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge differs from 0.5.

A nutritionist believes that 10% of teenagers eat cereal for breakfast. To investigate this claim, she selects a random sample of 150 teenagers and finds that 25 eat cereal for breakfast. She would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who eat cereal for breakfast differs from 10%. The standardized test statistic is z = 2.72 and the P-value is 0.0066. What conclusion should be made using the = 0.05 significance level?

C- Because the P-value is less than = 0.05, there is convincing evidence that the true proportion of teenagers who eat cereal for breakfast differs from 10%.

According to historical data, it is believed that 12% of American adults work more than one job. To investigate if this claim is still accurate today, a random sample of 100 American adults is selected. It is discovered that 18 of them work more than one job. A researcher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who work more than one job differs from 12%. The standardized test statistic is z = 1.85 and the P-value is 0.0644. What decision should the researcher make using the = 0.05 significance level?

C- Fail to reject H0 because the P-value is greater than = 0.05.

Timmy could follow two main routes to get to school. Timmy believes that route 1 is faster than route 2. To investigate, he decides to keep track for the next 4 weeks. Each morning, he flips a coin to determine which route he takes. Of the 20 school days, 12 days were randomly assigned to route 1, and 8 days were randomly assigned to route 2. The mean travel time for days assigned to route 1 was 20 minutes with a standard deviation of 3 minutes. The mean travel time for the days assigned to route 2 was 22 minutes with a standard deviation of 2 minutes. Timmy would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence of a difference in travel time for the 2 routes, so he tests H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 ≠ 0. Let μ1 = the true mean travel time to school along route 1 and μ2 = the true mean travel time to school along route 2. Dotplots of the distribution of travel time for route 1 and route 2 show no strong skewness or outliers. The conditions for inference have been met. The standardized test statistic is t = -1.79, and the P-value is between 0.05 and 0.10. What conclusion should be made using the significance level, = 0.05?

C- Fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the true mean travel time for route 1 differs from the true mean travel time for route 2.

A researcher is 95% confident that the interval from 5.09 to 10.13 captures the true mean amount of times models change clothes during a fashion shoot. Is it plausible that the true mean number of times for all models to change clothes during a fashion shoot may be 10?

C- Yes, this is a plausible value for the population mean, because 10 is within the 95% confidence interval.

It is common knowledge that a fair penny will land heads up 50% of the time and tails up 50% of the time. It is very unlikely for a penny to land on its edge when flipped, so a probability of 0 is assigned to this outcome. A curious student suspects that 5 pennies glued together will land on their edge 50% of the time. To investigate this claim, the student securely glues together 5 pennies and flips the penny stack 100 times. Of the 100 flips, the penny stack lands on its edge 46 times. The student would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge differs from 0.5. What are the appropriate hypotheses for this test?

C- H0: p = 0.5 versus Ha: p ≠ 0.5, where p = the true proportion of flips for which the penny stack will land on its edge.

A chiropractor would like to estimate the mean length of time needed for patients to recover from straining a back muscle. He selects a random sample of 15 patients from the large number of patients with this type of injury. He records the length of time it takes for each of these patients to fully recover. The distribution of recovery times for these patients is unimodal, fairly symmetric, and has no outliers. The standard error of the mean is 3.25 days. What is the interpretation of the standard error of the mean?

C- If we select many random samples of patients recovering from straining a back muscle, the sample mean length of time needed to recover will typically vary by about 3.25 days from the population mean.

Kat is interested in getting chickens so she can have fresh eggs. Before she buys her chickens, she wants to find the mean number of eggs each one will lay. She begins by randomly selecting 40 chickens from a large poultry farm and counts how many eggs each one lays within one month. She finds the mean to be 24.8 eggs with a standard deviation of 6.9 eggs. The resulting interval is (22.96, 26.64). Which of the following correctly interprets the 90% confidence interval for the true mean number of eggs chickens from this poultry farm lay within one month?

C- Kat can be 90% confident that the constructed interval (22.96, 26.64) captures the true mean number of eggs chickens from this farm lay.

The distribution of professional baseball player salaries has a mean of $3.2 million. An analyst believes that the mean salary for teams on the East Coast is different. The analyst randomly selects 15 baseball players from teams on the East Coast and records their annual salaries. The mean salary for the players in the sample is $3.9 million with a standard deviation of $2.1 million. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean salary for the baseball players on the East Coast is different from $3.2 million? Are the conditions for inference met?

C- No, since it is not known that the population of all players' salaries is approximately Normal, the Normal/large sample condition is not met.

A reporter claims that 90% of American adults cannot name the current vice president of the United States. To investigate this claim, the reporter selects a random sample of 50 American adults and finds that 28 are unable to name the current vice president. The reporter would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that fewer than 90% of American adults are unable to name the current vice president. Are the conditions for inference met?

C- No, the Large Counts Condition is not met.

It is believed that 80% of adults are honest. An honesty experiment was conducted on a random sample of 50 adults. It was discovered that 42 of the adults were honest. The researcher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that more than 80% of adults are honest. Are the conditions for inference met?

C- No, the Large Counts Condition is not met.

A food delivery service manager would like to estimate the mean amount of time it takes employees of his company to deliver food to the customers. To do so, he selects a random sample of 10 deliveries from the large number of deliveries made and records the amount of time each of those deliveries took. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

C- No, the Normal/large sample condition is not met.

To estimate the amount of carbon emissions released by cars, the mean weight of cars must be estimated. To do this, a random sample of 20 cars is selected and their mean weight is calculated. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

C- No, the Normal/large sample condition is not met.

On average, a person's body temperature should be approximately 98.6°F. A doctor would like to test the hypotheses versus where μ = the true mean body temperature of all adults. A 99% confidence interval based upon a random sample of 100 adults is (97.5, 99.2). Using the interval, can the researcher reject the null hypothesis?

C- No, the null hypothesis cannot be rejected at the significance level α = 0.01, because 98.6 is contained in the 99% confidence interval.

A claw machine game displays a sign that claims 90% of plays result in a win. A suspicious customer watches 40 consecutive plays of this game and observes that there is a winner in 30 of the games. The customer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of winners is less than 0.9. Are the conditions for inference met?

C- No, two conditions are not met.

An equestrian enthusiast is interested in the racing times of horses. She believes an older horse will have a faster race time than a younger horse. She selects a random sample of 17 sibling pairs of adult horses and records their times for running on the same track. The mean difference (older - younger) in the times to run the track is -15.7 seconds with a standard deviation of 8.3 seconds. Are the conditions for inference met?

C- No. The Normal/Large Sample condition is not met because the sample size is too small and the shape of the distribution of differences is not known.

Based upon historical data, it is known that 8% of 12-egg cartons contain at least one broken egg. A grocery store manager would like to carry out a simulation to estimate the number of cartons, in a sample of 10, that would contain at least one broken egg. She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 01-08 = carton contains a broken egg 09-99, 00 = carton does not contain a broken egg How can a random number table be used to simulate one trial of this situation?

C- Read 10 two-digit numbers. Count the number of two-digit pairs that represent cartons containing at least one broken egg.

A researcher is 95% confident that the interval from 19.8 to 31.5 captures the true mean number of unbroken crackers in a certain-sized bag. Is it plausible that the true mean number of unbroken crackers for all bags of this size may be 30?

C- Yes, this is a plausible value for the population mean, because 30 is within the 95% confidence interval.

A local school board believes there is a difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 38 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 35 respond yes. Let ps= the true proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week early and pw= the true proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. Which of the following is a correct statement about the conditions for this test?

C- The Large Counts Condition is not met.

A doctor would like to estimate the mean difference in height of pairs of identical twins. The doctor randomly selects 8 pairs of identical twins and determines the current height, in inches, of each twin. The data are displayed in the table. The conditions for inference are met. The 95% confidence interval for the mean difference (twin 1 - twin 2) in height is (-0.823, 0.573). What is the correct interpretation of this interval?

C- The doctor can be 95% confident that the interval from -0.823 inches to 0.573 inches captures the true mean difference in the height of twins.

Two different furniture manufacturers produce chairs. Let X represent the number of chairs produced daily at plant X, and let Y represent the number of chairs produced daily at plant Y. Assume that X and Y are independent random variables. Which of the following choices explains the meaning of independent random variables in context?

C- The independence of the two manufacturers means that knowing how much one furniture plant produces does not help us predict how much the other produces.

Animal shelters in a county need at least 15% of their animals to be adopted weekly to have room for the new animals that are brought into the various shelters. The county manager takes a random sample of shelters each week to estimate the overall proportion of animals that are adopted. If he concludes that the proportion has dropped below 15%, he will not accept any new animals into the shelters that week. He tests the hypotheses: H0: The adoption rate is 15%, and Ha: The adoption rate is less than 15%. What is a Type I error, and what is its consequence in this context?

C- The manager believes the adoption rate has dropped below 15%, when it actually has not. The manager will not accept more animals into the shelters, when there actually is room to care for those animals.

The manager of an aquatic center is interested in the average number of fish people keep in their saltwater tanks. She randomly selects 38 people who own saltwater fish tanks and asks how many fish they have. The mean amount is 48.2 fish with a standard deviation of 22.1 fish. Which of the following correctly interprets the 99% confidence interval for the true mean number of fish in saltwater tanks?

C- The manager can be 99% confident that the constructed interval captures the true mean number of fish in saltwater tanks.

From previous experience, the owner of an apple orchard knows that the mean weight of Gala apples is 140 grams. There has been more precipitation than usual this year. The owner believes the weights of the apples will be heavier than usual and therefore the crop will be more profitable. This will allow the owner to expand the orchard. The owner takes a random sample of 30 apples and records their mean weight. What is the consequence of a Type I error in this situation?

C- The owner believes the crop will be more profitable and expands the orchard when the true mean weight of the apples is actually not greater than 140 grams.

Two students want to determine whose paper airplane model can fly the farthest. To put their models to the test, they recruit five friends to participate in a study. Because the friends have varying throwing abilities, the students decide to have each friend throw each model of airplane. To determine which paper airplane each friend throws first, a coin is tossed. The data are displayed in the table, which shows how far each airplane flies to the nearest inch. The mean of the differences is 40 inches, and the standard deviation of the differences is 53.57 inches. The conditions for inference are met. A 90% confidence interval for the mean difference (B - A) in flight distance is -11.08 inches to 91.08 inches. What is the correct interpretation of this interval?

C- The students can be 90% confident that, on average, the model A plane flies between 91.08 inches farther than and 11.08 inches less than the model B plane.

A statistics class weighed 20 bags of grapes purchased from the store. The bags are advertised to contain 16 ounces, on average. The class calculated the 90% confidence interval for the true mean weight of bags of grapes from this store to be (15.875, 16.595) ounces. What is the correct interpretation of the 90 percent confidence interval?

C- We are 90% confident that the interval from 15.875 ounces to 16.595 ounces captures the true mean weight of bags of grapes.

A random sample of 30 students is selected. Each student is asked to report how much time they spent the previous night on math homework and how much time they spent on science homework. A 95% confidence interval for the true mean difference (math - science) in the amount of time spent on homework is 30 minutes to 75 minutes. A science teacher claims that students tend to spend more time working on math homework than on science homework. Is this claim supported by the 95% confidence interval?

C- Yes, the confidence interval consists entirely of positive numbers.

A random sample of 50 pairs of parents and children is selected. The parent is asked to estimate how many hours their child spent watching TV yesterday. The child is asked many hours they spent watching TV yesterday. A 90% confidence interval for the mean difference (parent's response - child's response) in the amount of time spent watching TV is 0.25 hours to 2.5 hours. A newspaper columnist writes the headline "Parents overestimate how much time children spend watching TV." Is this headline supported by the 90% confidence interval?

C- Yes, the confidence interval consists entirely of positive numbers.

A researcher is 95% confident that the interval from 2.8 hours to 6.5 hours captures the true mean amount of time it takes for 1 square foot of fresh paint to dry. Is there evidence that the true mean number of hours for 1 square foot of this type of paint to dry is greater than 5?

C- Yes, there is evidence for the population mean to be greater than 5, because 5 is within the 95% confidence interval.

The prices of pants at a large clothing store chain are skewed left with a mean of $32 and a standard deviation of $20. The manager at one of the stores randomly selects 30 pairs of pants. What is the shape of the distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 30 from this population?

C- approximately Normal

The prices of houses in the US is strongly skewed to the right with a mean of $383,500 and a standard deviation of $289,321. A real estate agent takes a random sample of 30 houses and records the mean price. What is the best description for the sampling distribution?

C- approximately Normal with a mean of 383,500 and a standard deviation of 52,823

A junior at a large high school wants to estimate the amount of time it takes to log in to a school computer. He randomly selects 35 students and records the amount of time it takes to log in. The junior constructs a 95% confidence interval for the true mean amount of time it takes to log in to a school computer. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

C- constructing a 90% confidence interval

A social worker at a large high school wants to estimate the number of days students are absent. He randomly selects 45 students and records the number of days each one is absent. The social worker constructs a 95% confidence interval for the true mean number of days students at this school are absent. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

C- constructing a 90% confidence interval

The volleyball coach at a large high school wants to estimate the number of times players spike the ball during any given game. She randomly selects 30 games and records the number of spikes. The coach constructs a 95% confidence interval for the true mean number of spikes players make in a game. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

C- constructing a 90% confidence interval

A company that sells hair-care products claims that a product that combines shampoo and conditioner works better than a shampoo and conditioner used separately. A researcher recruits 60 volunteers and pairs them according to age, hair color, and hair type. For each pair, the researcher flips a coin to determine which volunteers will use the shampoo/conditioner combination and which ones will use the separate shampoo and conditioner. After using the products for one month, the subjects are asked to rate their satisfaction with the hair products on a scale of 1-10 (1 = highly dissatisfied and 10 = highly satisfied). The mean difference in satisfaction ratings (Combined - Separate) is calculated. What is the appropriate procedure for testing the company's claim?

C- one-sample t-test for U diff

A pool supply company sells 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. A customer believes that the company may be underfilling the buckets. To investigate, an inspector is hired. The inspector randomly selects 30 of these buckets of chlorine tablets and weighs the contents of each bucket. The sample mean is 49.4 pounds with a standard deviation of 1.2 pounds. The inspector would like to know if this provides convincing evidence that the true mean weight of the chlorine tablets in the 50-pound buckets is less than 50 pounds, so he plans to test the hypotheses H0: μ = 50 versus Ha: μ < 50, where μ = the true mean weight of all 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. The conditions for inference are met. What are the appropriate test statistic and P-value?

C- t = -2.74. The P-value is between 0.005 and 0.01.

The mean price of houses in the US is $383,500. A real estate agent believes the mean price of houses in a local neighborhood is less than the national mean. The agent takes a random sample of 30 houses and finds the mean price to be $295,089 with a standard deviation of $156,321. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean price of the houses in the area is less than $383,500? What are the test statistic and P-value for this significance test?

C- t = -3.10 and 0.001 < P-value < 0.0025

A student claims that professional male basketball players are taller, on average, than college male basketball players. To investigate this claim, the student selects a random sample of 30 professional basketball players and 30 college basketball players. The mean height of the sample of professional male basketball players is 76 inches with a standard deviation of 3.5 inches. The mean height of the sample of college male basketball players is 74.5 inches with a standard deviation of 5.5 inches. The student would like to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean height of all professional male basketball players is greater than the true mean height of all college male basketball players. The hypotheses H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 > 0 are tested where μ1 = the true mean height of all professional male basketball players, and μ2 = the true mean height of all college male basketball players. The conditions for inference have been met. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for a t-test about a difference in means?

C- t = 1.26. The P-value is between 0.10 and 0.15.

An engineer would like to design a parking garage in the most cost-effective manner. He reads that the average height of pickup trucks, which is the largest type of vehicle that should be expected to fit into the parking garage is 76.4 inches. To double-check this figure, the engineer employs a statistician. The statistician selects a random sample of 100 trucks and finds the mean height of the sample to be 77.1 inches with a standard deviation of 5.2 inches. The statistician will determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean height of all trucks is greater than 76.4 inches. The statistician plans to test the hypotheses, H0: μ = 76.4 versus Ha: μ > 76.4, where μ = the true mean height of all trucks. The conditions for inference are met. What are the appropriate test statistic and P-value?

C- t = 1.35. The P-value is between 0.05 and 0.10.

Timmy could follow two main routes to get to school. Timmy believes that route 1 is faster than route 2. To investigate, he decides to keep track for the next 4 weeks. Each morning, he flips a coin to determine which route he takes. Of the 20 school days, 12 days were randomly assigned to route 1, and 8 days were randomly assigned to route 2. The mean travel time for days assigned to route 1 was 20 minutes with a standard deviation of 3 minutes. The mean travel time for the days assigned to route 2 was 22 minutes with a standard deviation of 2 minutes. Timmy would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence of a difference in travel time for the 2 routes, so he tests H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 ≠ 0. Let μ1 = the true mean travel time to school along route 1 and μ2 = the true mean travel time to school along route 2. Dotplots of the distribution of travel time for route 1 and route 2 show no strong skewness or outliers. The conditions for inference have been met. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for a t-test about a difference in means?

C- t = 1.79. The P-value is between 0.025 and 0.05.

A manufacturer of cell phones would like to estimate how much longer the battery lasts in their model 10 phone than in their model 9 phone. To estimate this difference, they randomly select 40 cell phones of each model from the production line. They subject each phone to a standard battery life test. The 40 model 10 phones have a mean battery life of 14.4 hours with a standard deviation of 2.1 hours. The 40 model 9 phones have a mean battery life of 12.8 hours with a standard deviation of 2.3 hours. What is the appropriate inference procedure to be used to estimate how much longer the battery lasts in their model 10 phone than in their model 9 phone?

C- t confidence interval for a difference in means

An experiment is conducted to estimate the difference in work productivity for employees under two conditions: with and without music playing in the background. Twenty employees volunteered to be part of the study. Ten of the volunteers were randomly assigned to work for one week with music playing in the background. The other 10 volunteers worked for one week without music playing in the background. Productivity is measured by counting the number of units produced for the week. Here are dotplots, which display the data: What is the appropriate inference procedure to be used to estimate the difference in the mean number of units produced by employees who work with and without music playing in the background?

C- t confidence interval for a difference in means

The maintenance crew of a hotel must monitor the temperature of the hotel pool and hot tub. To enhance comfort, the management team requests that the mean pool temperature and the mean hot tub temperatures not differ by more than 15 degrees. To estimate the difference in these mean temperatures the maintenance crew selects a random sample of 8 times to check the hot tub temperature and a random sample of 10 times to check the pool temperature. Although the sample sizes are small, the distribution of temperature for the pool and for the hot tub does not show strong skewness or any outliers. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

C- t confidence interval for a difference in means

A real-estate agent conducted an experiment to test the effect of selling a staged home vs. selling an empty home. To do so, the agent obtained a list of 10 comparable homes just listed for sale that were currently empty. He randomly assigned 5 of the homes to be "staged," meaning they were filled with nice furniture and decorated. The owners of the 5 homes all agreed to have their homes staged by professional decorators. The other 5 homes remained empty. The hypothesis is that empty homes are not as appealing to buyers as staged homes and, therefore, sell for lower prices than staged homes. The mean selling price of the 5 empty homes was $150,000 with a standard deviation of $22,000. The mean selling price of the 5 staged homes was $175,000 with a standard deviation of 35,000. A dotplot of each sample shows no strong skewness and no outliers. The agent tests H0: μ1 - μ2 = 0, Ha: μ1 - μ2 < 0, where μ1 = the true mean selling price of all comparable empty homes and μ2 = the true mean selling price of all comparable staged homes. What is the name of the appropriate inference procedure?

C- t-test for a difference in means

A teacher has two large containers (A and B) filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportion of red beads is the same in each container. The students believe the proportions are different. Each student shakes the first container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contained 10 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. The student then calculated the difference in the proportions of red beads. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

C- two-sample z-test for PA-PB

The owner of a computer company claims that the proportion of defective computer chips produced at plant A is higher than the proportion of defective chips produced by plant B. A random sample of 100 chips is collected from each plant and the difference (A - B) in the proportion of defective chips is calculated. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

C- two-sample z-test for PA-PB

Sisters Amilia and Bianca play games together often. Let A represent the number of games Amilia wins monthly, and let B represent the number of games Bianca wins monthly. A and B are independent events. The mean of A is 35.7 games with a standard deviation of 5.1 games, and the mean of B is 37.3 games with a standard deviation of 6.8 games. What is the mean and standard deviation of the total number of games won, S = A + B?

C- us= 73.0 games and as= 8.5 games

Devon's tennis coach says that 72% of Devon's serves are good serves. Devon thinks he has a higher proportion of good serves. To test this, 50 of his serves are randomly selected and 40 of them are good. To determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the proportion of Devon's serves that are good is greater than 72%, 100 trials of a simulation are conducted. Devon's hypotheses are: H0: p = 72% and Ha: p > 72%, where p = the true proportion of Devon's serves that are good. Based on the results of the simulation, what is the estimate of the P-value of the test?

C-0.14

A restaurant wants to determine how much their customers like the dinner specials prepared by the new restaurant chef. Which survey method is most likely to lead to response bias?

Create a survey that is administered by the waitstaff prior to the customer leaving the restaurant.

A director of a company notices that there is a declining relationship between the company's sales revenue and customer satisfaction. Here is a scatterplot of the data for the past six months. Which statement is true?

Customer satisfaction is declining ever more rapidly as the company's sales revenue increases.

Consider the given probability histogram of a binomial random variable. What are the center and shape of the distribution?

Center: 5.4Shape: skewed left

Consider the given probability histogram of a binomial random variable. What are the center and shape of the distribution?

Center: 8 Shape: skewed left

A newspaper collected information on schools in its circulation area in order to compare their quality. Two measures the newspaper collected for each school, mean class size and mean score on a statewide reading exam, are shown in the scatterplot. Which statement regarding the association shown could explain the relationship?

Class size appears to have little effect on test scores. Schools in more affluent areas have larger class sizes, which is associated with higher test scores. -Schools in more affluent areas have smaller class sizes, which is associated with higher test scores. Schools in less affluent areas tend to have smaller class sizes, which is associated with lower test scores.

Which of the following is not true about cluster sampling?

Cluster sampling has the advantage of reducing sampling variability.

Residents were asked to identify the type of car they drive and the average miles per gallon (mpg) the car receives on the highway.

Complete the statements based on the information. The categorical variable is names of residents✔ types of carsnumbers of miles per gallon. The continuous quantitative variable is names of residentstypes of cars✔ numbers of miles per gallon.

A veterinarian knows that the supplement glucosamine is beneficial for dogs' joints. He wants to determine if a supplement with both glucosamine and chondroitin would be more beneficial than glucosamine alone for dogs' joint health. The veterinarian asks the owners of dogs with known joint issues if they would be willing to have their dog participate in his study, and 32 owners agree to the study. The veterinarian also knows that breed and age may affect the results of the experiment. Which of the following designs would be most appropriate for this experiment?

Completely randomized design: Randomly assign the treatments to the dogs. -Matched pairs design: Block the dogs based on breed. Then, within each block, pair the dogs based on age. Randomly assign the treatments to each dog in the pairs. Randomized block design: Block the dogs based on breed. Then, randomly assign half of the dogs in each block to receive glucosamine only and the other half to receive glucosamine with chondroitin. Observational study: The veterinarian should randomly select patient records. Then, use the joint health of dogs that use glucosamine only and those that use glucosamine with chondroitin.

A cell phone manufacturer would like to estimate the mean difference in battery lifespan for a phone in full-power versus power-saver mode. They randomly select eight phones and determine the battery lifespan, in hours, for each phone using each power mode. The data are displayed in the table. What is the mean difference (low - full) and the standard deviation of the differences?

D

A company that makes robotic vacuums claims their newest model of vacuum lasts, on average, 2 hours when starting on a full charge. To investigate this claim, a consumer group purchases a random sample of 5 vacuums of this model. They charge each unit fully and then measure the amount of time each unit runs. They would like to know if there is convincing evidence that the true mean run time differs from 2 hours. The consumer group plans to test the hypotheses = 2 versus < 2, where μ = the true mean run time for all vacuums of this model. The power of this test to reject = 2 when μ = 1.75 is 0.0865 using a significance level of 0.05. Which combination of sample size and significance level would increase the power of this test the most?

D

A computer company wants to determine the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 100 chips from the day's production and determines that there are 12 defective chips. Assuming all conditions are met, he constructs a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of defective chips from a day's production. What are the calculations for this interval?

D

A local candidate believes more than half of the constituents in their district would favor them for political office. A random sample of 120 voters was polled, and 65 stated they would likely vote for the candidate. Which hypotheses would test the candidate's claim?

D

A local school board believes there is a difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 38 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. Let ps= the true proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week early and pw= the true proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. Which of the following is the correct standardized test statistic and P-value for the hypotheses, ?

D

A popular restaurant chain will open a new franchise if a study shows that more than 60% of residents in an area would purchase food from the restaurant. An analyst of a particular area randomly selects 500 residents and surveys them about their interest in the restaurant. Of the 500 residents, 320 stated they would purchase food from the restaurant. Which hypotheses test the proportion of residents who would purchase food from the restaurant in this area?

D

A statistics student wants to survey a high school of 910 students concerning support for increasing the number of student parking spots. The student randomly selects 90 students, and finds that 63 support increasing the number of student parking spots. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of students who would support the increase in the number of parking spots?

D

A study found that 15% of teenagers get the recommended 8 to10 hours of sleep each night. A guidance counselor at a large high school takes a random sample of 80 students and asks them if they get 8 to 10 hours of sleep each night of the school week. Of the 80 students, 15 state they get 8-10 hours of sleep each school night. Which hypotheses would test if the proportion of students at this high school is different from the proportion in the study?

D

A therapist wanted to determine if yoga or meditation is better for relieving stress. The therapist recruited 100 of her high-stress patients. Fifty of them were randomly assigned to take weekly yoga classes, and the other 50 were assigned weekly meditation classes. After one month, 30 of the 50 patients in the yoga group reported less stress, and 35 of the 50 patients in the meditation group reported less stress. Assuming the conditions for inference are met, what is the 95% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of patients experiencing stress relief from the yoga and meditation groups?

D

Chuck wants to know which brand of tire, A or B, lasts longer on cars. He chooses 32 cars and puts brand A on one side of the car and brand B on the other side. The side that receives brand A is determined by a coin toss. After three months, Chuck measures the amount of tread on all tires to determine if, on average, there is a difference (brand A - brand B) in tread wear. What are the hypotheses Chuck should use?

D

In a small town of 5,832 people, the mayor wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of voters ages 18-30 who would support an increase in the food tax, and the proportion of voters ages 31-40 who would support an increase in the food tax. An assistant to the mayor surveys 85 randomly chosen voters ages 18-30, and finds that 62 support the increase. A random sample of 70 voters ages 31-40 is also surveyed, and 56 support the increase. Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, what is the 99% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of voters who would support the increase in the food tax for the different age groups?

D

On average, a person's body temperature should be approximately 98.6°F. A doctor would like to test the hypotheses = 98.6 versus 98.6 where μ = the true mean body temperature of all adults. Before conducting the test, the doctor determines that the power of the test to reject the null hypothesis when μ = 98 using α = 0.01 and n = 10 is 0.2474. What combination of sample size and significance level would increase the power of this test the most?

D

The owner of a popular coffee shop believes that customers who drink coffee are more likely to use their own cup than customers who drink espresso. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all coffee purchases and 50 receipts from all espresso purchases. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For espresso purchases, 18 receipts showed the customer used their own cup.

D

The owner of a popular coffee shop believes that customers who drink espresso are less likely to use their own cup compared to customers who drink coffee. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all espresso purchases and 50 receipts from all coffee purchases. For espresso purchases, 15 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed the customer used their own cup. Let pEspresso = the true proportion of customers who drink espresso and use their own cup and pCoffee = the true proportion of customers who drink coffee and use their own cup. Which of the following are the correct hypotheses to test the owner's claim?

D

The proportion of students at a large high school who live within five miles of the school is p = 0.19. The principal takes a random sample of 17 students from this school. Which is the best description of the shape for the sampling distribution of p?

D

To estimate the benefits of an SAT prep course, a random sample of 10 students enrolled in the course is selected. For each of these students, their entrance score on the exam taken at the beginning of the course is recorded. Their exit score on the exam they take at the end of the course is recorded as well. The table displays the scores. The mean of the differences is 193 points, and the standard deviation of the differences is 62.73 points. The conditions for inference are met. What is the correct 98% confidence interval for the mean difference (after - before) in score?

D

A grocery store shopper wants to estimate the mean weight of the eggs in a particular carton of extra-large eggs. She opens the carton of eggs, randomly selects three eggs, and weighs them on a food scale. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

D- No, the 10% condition is not met, the Normal/large sample condition is not met, but the random condition is met

A cell phone provider has 85% of its customers rank their service as "satisfactory." Nico takes a random sample of 75 customers from this cell phone provider. What is the probability that 83% or more of this sample ranks the provider's service as "satisfactory"?

D- 0.686

The distribution of the number of items washed in a standard load of laundry is skewed left with a mean of 41 items and a standard deviation of 7.7 items. What is the probability that 50 randomly selected loads of laundry have a mean of more than 39.5 items?

D- 0.9158

There are 4 blood types, and not all are equally likely to be in blood banks. In a certain blood bank, 49% of donations are Type O blood, 27% of donations are Type A blood, 20% of donations are Type B blood, and 4% of donations are Type AB blood. What is the expected number of donations until the first Type AB donation is received?

D- 25

A conference consists of 5 sessions: A, B, C, D, and E. Here are the costs of the sessions. Session A: $50Session B: $50Session C: $100Session D: $150Session E: $200 Here is a graph of the cost of all 5 sessions. A participant plans to attend 3 sessions. Here is a list of all possible samples of size 3 sessions from this population of 5 sessions: ABC, ABD, ABE, ACD, ACE, ADE, BCD, BCE, BDE, and CDE. Here is a graph displaying the minimum session cost for each possible sample of 3 sessions. The participant chooses 3 sessions at random from the list of all 5 sessions. The result of the random selection is sessions B, D, and E. Here is a graph displaying the distribution of session cost for this sample. Which of the following gives the correct order of the graphs of the population distribution, distribution of a single sample, and sampling distribution, respectively?

D- A, C, B

Chuck wants to know which brand of tire, A or B, lasts longer on cars. He chooses 32 cars and puts brand A on one side of the car and brand B on the other side. The side that receives brand A is determined by a coin toss. After three months, Chuck measures the amount of tread on all tires to determine if, on average, there is a difference (brand A - brand B) in tread wear. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- All conditions are met.

The owner of a popular coffee shop believes that customers who drink espresso are less likely to use their own cup compared with customers who drink coffee. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all espresso purchases and 50 receipts from all coffee purchases. For espresso purchases, 15 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed the customer used their own cup. Let pEspresso= the true proportion of customers who drink espresso and use their own cup and pCoffee= the true proportion of customers who drink coffee and use their own cup. Which of the following is a correct statement about the conditions for this test?

D- All conditions for inference are met.

The mean weight for a typical bunch of bananas in grocery stores is 3.54 pounds. The owner of a grocery store will reject a shipment of bananas if the mean weight of the banana bunches is less than 3.54 pounds. The owner randomly selects and weighs 30 bunches of bananas. A significance test at an alpha level of tests the hypotheses pounds; pounds. What is a Type II error in this situation?

D- Based on the sample mean, the owner concludes that the mean weight of all of the bunches of bananas is not less than 3.54 pounds when the true mean weight is actually less than 3.54 pounds.

A school administrator claims that 85% of the students at his large school plan to attend college after graduation. The statistics teacher selects a random sample of 50 students from this school and finds that 76% of them plan to attend college after graduation. The administrator would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of all students from this school who plan to attend college after graduation is less than 85%. The standardized test statistic is z = -1.78 and the P-value is 0.0375. What conclusion should be made using the = 0.01 significance level?

D- Because the P-value is greater than = 0.01, there is not convincing evidence that the true proportion of all students from this school who plan to attend college after graduation is less than 85%.

It is claimed that 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. To investigate this claim, a random sample of 50 puppies is selected. It is discovered that 42 are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. A trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that greater than 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old. The standardized test statistic is z = 1.47 and the P-value is 0.0708. What conclusion should be made using the = 0.05 significance level?

D- Because the P-value is greater than = 0.05, there is not convincing evidence that greater than 75% of puppies are house-trained by the time they are 6 months old.

A local pet store claims that its puppy training program increases the length of time puppies sit still when commanded to do so. A patron wonders if this claim is true. The patron asks to see the sitting times of 14 randomly chosen puppies. The differences (pretraining - post-training) in times for each puppy are listed. A positive value indicates the puppy's sitting time decreased after the training. -1.2, 3.8, 0.5, 2.1, -0.4, 1.0, 2.5, -5.7, 3.0, 1.0, 2.3, -0.8, 0, 0.4 Assuming the conditions for inference have been met, is there evidence of an increase in sitting times for puppies like the ones in the study? Use a significance level of α = 0.05.

D- Because the P-value is greater than α, there is not sufficient evidence of an increase, on average, in sitting times for puppies like the ones in the study.

The owner of a fitness watch would like to determine if the mean number of steps he takes per day differs from the recommended 10,000 steps per day, using α = 0.05. He selects a random sample of 50 days with the intention of testing the hypotheses = 10,000 steps versus steps where μ = the true mean number of steps taken per day. Rather than test these hypotheses, he computes a 95% confidence interval for the true mean number of steps he takes per day. The 95% confidence interval is (8,250, 10,700). Based on the confidence interval, what conclusion can be made?

D- Fail to reject H0. Since 10,000 does not fall outside the 95% confidence interval, there is not convincing evidence that the true mean number of steps he takes per day differs from 10,000 steps.

On the SAT exam, a total of 25 minutes is allotted for students to answer 20 math questions without the use of a calculator. A guidance counselor would like to know if the students in his school are prepared to complete this portion of the exam in the time allotted. To investigate, the counselor selects a random sample of 35 students and administers this portion of the test. The students are instructed to turn in their test as soon as they have completed the questions. The mean amount of time taken by the students is 23.5 minutes with a standard deviation of 4.8 minutes. The counselor would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time needed for all students of this school to complete this portion of the test is less than 25 minutes and therefore tests the hypotheses H0: μ = 25 versus Ha: μ < 25, where μ = the true mean amount of time needed for students of this school to complete this portion of the exam. The conditions for inference are met. The test statistic is t = -1.85 and the P-value is between 0.025 and 0.05. What conclusion should be made at the significance level, ?

D- Fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time needed for students of this school to complete this portion of the exam is less than 25 minutes.

A company that makes robotic vacuums claims that their newest model of vacuum lasts, on average, two hours when starting on a full charge. To investigate this claim, a consumer group purchases a random sample of five vacuums of this model. They charge each unit fully and then measure the amount of time each unit runs. Here are the data (in hours): 2.2, 1.85, 2.15, 1.95, and 1.90. They would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true mean run time differs from two hours. The consumer group plans to test the hypotheses H0: μ = 2 versus Ha: μ ≠ 2, where μ = the true mean run time for all vacuums of this model. The conditions for inference are met. The test statistic is t = 0.14 and the P-value is greater than 0.25. What conclusion should be made at the significance level, ?

D- Fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the true mean run time for all vacuums of this model is different from 2 hours.

A carnival game is designed so that approximately 10% of players will win a large prize. If there is evidence that the percentage differs significantly from this target, then adjustments will be made to the game. To investigate, a random sample of 100 players is selected from the large population of all players. Of these players, 19 win a large prize. The question of interest is whether the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of players who win this game differs from 0.10. What are the appropriate hypotheses for this test?

D- H0: p = 0.1 versus Ha: p ≠ 0.1, where p = the proportion of players who win this game.

A school nurse would like to estimate the true mean amount of sleep that students at the high school get per night. To do so, she selects a random sample of 30 students and determines that the 90% confidence interval for the true mean number of hours of sleep that high school students get per night to be 6.5 to 7.5 hours. Which of these statements is a correct interpretation of the confidence level?

D- If many random samples of size 30 are selected from the population of all students, about 90% of the intervals would capture the true mean number of hours of sleep that students of this high school get per night.

A farmer would like to estimate the mean amount of corn produced on the east side of his farm versus the west side of his farm where the soil is different. To do so, he selects a random sample of 20 of the 400 plots of land on the east side of the farm and randomly selects 10 plots of land from the 150 plots on the west side of his farm and measures the amount of corn produced for each plot. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- No, the Normal/large sample condition is not met for both samples.

A veteran math teacher at a large high school claims that 93% of their students pass the state's final exam. A random sample of 120 of the teacher's students was chosen, and 108 passed the state's final exam. Let = the proportion of the random sample who passed the state's final exam. The probability that 90% or fewer of this teacher's students passed the state's final exam is 0.096. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the teacher's claim?

D- No, the difference between the sample result and what is expected is not extreme enough. The probability of it occurring by chance alone is not unlikely.

An air-conditioning repair technician claims to complete 67% of repairs in under an hour. A random sample of 31 repairs was chosen, and 22 of those were completed in under an hour. Let = the proportion of the random sample that were completed in under an hour. The probability that 71% or more of this technician's repairs were completed in under an hour is 0.317. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the technician's claim?

D- No, the difference between the sample result and what is expected is not extreme enough. The probability of it occurring by chance alone is not unlikely.

Ten membersThree juniors and seven seniors from the science club qualify for a national competition, but only five people per school can attend the event. The coach decides to put the 10 members' names on identical slips of paper, put the slips in a hat, and pull out five names, one at a time. Those five students will go to the national competition. Let X represent the number of juniors selected to attend the competition. Have the conditions for a binomial setting been met for this scenario?

D- No, the names were pulled and not replaced in the hat, so the independence condition is not met.

The distribution of professional baseball player salaries has a mean of $3.2 million. An analyst believes that the mean salary for teams on the East Coast is different. The analyst randomly selects 30 baseball players from teams on the East Coast and records their annual salaries. The mean salary for the players in the sample is $3.9 million with a standard deviation of $2.1 million. The analyst conducts a one-sample t-test for and calculates a P-value of 0.078. At the level, what is the correct conclusion for this test?

D- The analyst should fail to reject the null hypothesis since 0.078 > 0.05. There is not convincing evidence that the mean salary of the baseball players on the East Coast is different from $3.2 million.

On a college entrance exam a total of 25 minutes is allotted for students to answer 20 math questions without the use of a calculator. A guidance counselor would like to know if the students in his school are prepared to complete this portion of the exam in the time allotted. To investigate, the counselor selects a random sample of 35 students and administers this portion of the test. The students are instructed to turn in their test as soon as they have completed the questions. The counselor would like to know if there is convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time needed for all students of this school to complete this portion of the test is less than 25 minutes and therefore tests the hypotheses = 25 versus < 25, where μ = the true mean amount of time needed by students at this school to complete this portion of the exam. The power of this test to reject the null hypothesis when μ = 24.5 is 0.735. What could the counselor have done to increase the power of this test?

D- The counselor could have used a sample size of 40 students.

At a university, 34% of undergraduate students love spicy food, while 45% of graduate students love spicy food. Let and be the sample proportions of undergraduate and graduate students at this university, respectively, who love spicy food. Suppose 35 undergraduate students and 28 graduate students from this university are selected at random and asked if they love spicy food. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of ?

D- The difference (undergraduate students - graduate students) in the sample proportions of those who love spicy food typically varies about 0.123 from the true difference in proportions.

The distribution of the heights of five-year-old children has a mean of 42.5 inches. A pediatrician believes the five-year-old children in a city are taller on average. The pediatrician selects a random sample of 30 five-year-old children and measures their heights. The mean height of the sample is 43.6 inches with a standard deviation of 3.6 inches. The pediatrician conducts a one-sample t-test for and calculates a P-value of 0.052. At the level, what is the correct conclusion for this test?

D- The pediatrician should fail to reject the null hypothesis since 0.052 > 0.01. There is not convincing evidence that the mean height of five-year old children in this city is greater than 42.5 inches.

According to a soccer coach, 75% of soccer players have had at least one sprained ankle. An athletic trainer would like to investigate this claim. To do so, the trainer selects a random sample of 125 college soccer players from across the country and finds that 99 of them have had at least one sprained ankle. The trainer would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of college soccer players who have had at least one sprained ankle is greater than 75%. The computer output gives the results of a z-test for one proportion. What conclusion should be made?

D- There is not convincing evidence that the true proportion of college soccer players who have had at least one sprained ankle is greater than 75%.

A company that makes robotic vacuums claims that their newest model of vacuum lasts, on average, two hours when starting on a full charge. To investigate this claim, a consumer group purchases a random sample of five vacuums of this model. They charge each unit fully and then measure the amount of time each unit runs. Here are the data (in hours): 2.2, 1.85, 2.15, 1.95, and 1.90. They would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true mean run time differs from two hours. The consumer group plans to test the hypotheses H0: μ = 2 versus Ha: μ ≠ 2, where μ = the true mean run time for all vacuums of this model. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all conditions for inference are met.

A pool supply company sells 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. A customer believes that the company may be underfilling the buckets. To investigate, an inspector is hired. The inspector randomly selects 30 of these buckets of chlorine tablets and weighs the contents of each bucket. The sample mean is 49.4 pounds with a standard deviation of 1.2 pounds. The inspector would like to know if this provides convincing evidence that the true mean weight of the chlorine tablets in the 50-pound buckets is less than 50 pounds, so he plans to test the hypotheses H0: μ = 50 versus Ha: μ < 50, where μ = the true mean weight of all 50-pound buckets of chlorine tablets. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all conditions for inference are met.

An engineer would like to design a parking garage in the most cost-effective manner. He reads that the average height of pickup trucks, which is the largest type of vehicle that should be expected to fit into the parking garage, is 76.4 inches. To double-check this figure, the engineer employs a statistician. The statistician selects a random sample of 100 trucks and finds the mean height of the sample to be 77.1 inches with a standard deviation of 5.2 inches. The statistician will determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean height of all trucks is greater than 76.4 inches. The statistician plans to test the hypotheses, H0: μ = 76.4 versus Ha: μ > 76.4, where μ = the true mean height of all trucks. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all conditions for inference are met.

The mean price of houses in the US is $383,500. A real estate agent believes the mean price of houses in a local neighborhood is less than the national mean. The agent takes a random sample of 30 houses and finds the mean price to be $295,089 with a standard deviation of $156,321. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean price of the houses in the area is less than $383,500? Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all conditions for inference are met.

A manufacturing company packages shipments in either large or small boxes. A random sample of 40 shipments that are packaged in large boxes is found to have a mean of 15 pounds and a standard deviation of 2.8 pounds. A separate random sample of 50 shipments that are packaged in small boxes is found to have a mean of 10 pounds and a standard deviation of 1.5 pounds. The manager would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in small boxes is less than the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in large boxes. Let μL = the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in large boxes and μS = the true mean weight of all shipments that are packaged in small boxes. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all of the conditions for inference have been met.

A student claims that professional male basketball players are taller, on average, than college male basketball players. To investigate this claim, the student selects a random sample of 30 professional basketball players and 30 college basketball players. The mean height of the sample of professional male basketball players is 76 inches with a standard deviation of 3.5 inches. The mean height of the sample of college male basketball players is 74.5 inches with a standard deviation of 5.5 inches. The student would like to determine if there is convincing evidence that the true mean height of all professional male basketball players is greater than the true mean height of all college male basketball players. Let μ1 = the true mean height of all professional male basketball players and μ2 = the true mean height of all college male basketball players. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all of the conditions for inference have been met.

Can a person train to become better at holding their breath? An experiment was designed to find out. Twelve volunteers were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups. The 6 volunteers assigned to group 1 were given breath-holding exercises to perform for 2 weeks. The other group was not given any information about the experiment. At the end of the 2 weeks, all 12 volunteers were individually tested to determine how long they could hold their breath. Here are the data (in seconds). Group 1: 90, 88, 70, 110, 75, 105 Group 2: 40, 48, 35, 50, 55, 62 The researcher would like to determine if these data provide convincing evidence that the true mean amount of time volunteers who were given training held their breath is greater than the volunteers without training. Let μ1 = the true mean amount of time that volunteers who were given training held their breath and μS = the true mean amount of time that volunteers without training held their breath. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all of the conditions for inference have been met.

Timmy could follow two main routes to get to school. Timmy believes that route 1 is faster than route 2. To investigate, he decides to keep track for the next 4 weeks. Each morning, he flips a coin to determine which route he takes. Of the 20 school days, 12 days were randomly assigned to route 1, and 8 days were randomly assigned to route 2. The mean travel time for days assigned to route 1 was 20 minutes with a standard deviation of 3 minutes. The mean travel time for the days assigned to route 2 was 22 minutes with a standard deviation of 2 minutes. Timmy would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence of a difference in travel time for the 2 routes. Let μ1 = the true mean travel time to school along route 1 and μ2 = the true mean travel time to school along route 2. Dotplots of the distribution of travel time for route 1 and route 2 show no strong skewness or outliers. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, all of the conditions for inference have been met.

A chiropractor would like to estimate the mean length of time needed for patients to recover from straining a back muscle. He selects a random sample of 15 patients from the large number of patients with this type of injury. He records the length of time it takes for each of these patients to fully recover. The distribution of recovery times for these patients is unimodal, fairly symmetric, and has no outliers. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

D- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A doctor would like to estimate the mean difference in height of pairs of identical twins. The doctor randomly selects 8 pairs of identical twins and determines the current height, in inches, of each twin. The data are displayed in the table, and a dotplot of the differences is given. The doctor would like to construct a 95% confidence interval for the mean difference (twin 1 - twin 2) in height. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A farmer would like to estimate the mean amount of milk produced per day by his 300 cows. He selects a random sample of 15 cows and records the amount of milk produced (in gallons) by those cows. The dotplot shows the data. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

D- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A medical study is conducted to determine which migraine treatment, A or B, provides faster relief. The study uses 10 volunteers who claim to suffer from migraines. Half of the volunteers are randomly assigned to use treatment A when they experience their first migraine. The other half are assigned to use treatment B. Then, after no treatment for one month, the treatments are reversed. The volunteers each record the amount of time it takes, in minutes, to experience relief from their migraine under each treatment. The data are displayed in the table, and a dotplot of the differences is given. The researchers would like to construct a 99% confidence interval for the mean difference (A - B) in the time it took to experience relief. Are the conditions for inference met?

D- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

The owner of a smart watch would like to estimate the mean number of steps they take per day. To do so, they select a random sample of 30 days from the previous year's data and record the number of steps they took on each of those days. Are the conditions for constructing a t confidence interval met?

D- Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A group of six students decides to conduct an experiment about "brain freeze," a phenomenon that often occurs when eating something cold. The students each flip a coin. If they flip heads, they eat a cup of Italian ice as fast as they can while sitting in an air-conditioned car. If they flip tails, they eat a cup of Italian ice as fast as they can while sitting outside in the sunshine. After a recovery period, they each complete the opposite treatment. The students record the amount of time it takes, in seconds, for them to experience brain freeze under each condition. A 95% confidence interval for the true mean difference (sun - car) in the time it takes to get brain freeze is 8.607 seconds to 37.06 seconds. Based on this confidence interval, is it reasonable to claim that brain freeze tends to occur more quickly when eating Italian ice in an air-conditioned car than while sitting in the sunshine?

D- Yes, the confidence interval only contains positive values.

To estimate the benefits of an SAT prep course, a random sample of 10 students enrolled in the course is selected. For each of these students, their entrance score on the exam taken at the beginning of the course is recorded. Their exit score on the exam they take at the end of the course is recorded as well. The table displays the scores. A 98% confidence interval for the mean difference (after - before) in score is 137.04 points to 248.96 points. Based on the confidence interval, is it reasonable to claim that the SAT prep course is beneficial?

D- Yes, the confidence interval only contains positive values.

An athletic trainer would like to estimate how many additional calories are burned when completing a high intensity interval training (HIIT) workout for 30 minutes rather than doing yoga for 30 minutes. A group of 30 volunteers are randomly assigned to take a 30-minute HIIT class or a 30-minute yoga class wearing a calorie-counting armband. A 90% confidence interval for the true difference in the population means is 157.23 calories to 210.91 calories. Based upon the confidence interval, is it reasonable to claim that doing 30 minutes of a HIIT workout burns 250 more calories than doing a 30-minute yoga workout?

D- no because 250 is not in the confidence interval

A shoe company wants to determine if the new tread on its top line of running shoes lasts longer than the original tread. The company recruits 50 runners for a study. Each runner will perform their typical workout wearing one shoe with the original tread on one foot and another shoe with the new tread on the other foot. The foot that wears the new type of tread will be decided by flipping a coin. After one month, the runner will wear the new type of tread on the opposite foot. At the end of the second month, the difference in tread wear (New - Original) will be calculated. The company will then estimate the mean difference in the treads. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

D- one-sample t-interval for Udiff

The daily temperatures in fall and winter months in Virginia have a mean of 62o F. A meteorologist in southwest Virginia believes the mean temperature is colder in this area. The meteorologist takes a random sample of 30 daily temperatures from the fall and winter months over the last five years in southwest Virginia. The mean temperature for the sample is 59oF with a standard deviation of 6.21oF. Do the data provide convincing evidence at the level that the mean temperature in fall and winter months in southwest Virginia is less than 62o F? What is the test statistic for this significance test?

D- t = -2.65

What critical value of t* should be used for a 95% confidence interval for the population mean based on a random sample of 15 observations?

D- t* = 2.145

In a statistics activity, students are asked to spin a penny and a dime and determine the proportion of times that each lands with tails up. The students believe that since a dime is lighter, it will have a lower proportion of times landing tails up compared with the penny. The students are instructed to spin the penny and the dime 30 times and record the number of times each lands tails up. For one student, the penny lands tails side up 18 times, and the dime lands tails side up 20 times. Let pD= the true proportion of times a dime will land tails up and pP= the true proportion of times a penny will land tails up. Which of the following is the correct name for this test?

D- two-proportion z-test

The owner of a computer company wants to estimate the difference in the proportion of defective computer chips produced by plant A and produced by plant B. A random sample of 100 chips is collected from each plant and the difference in the proportion of defective chips is calculated. What is the appropriate inference procedure?

D- two-sample z-interval for PA-PB

A produce company packages presliced celery and carrots. Let X represent the length of a slice of celery, and let Y represent the length of a slice of carrot. X and Y are independent events. The mean of X is 2.5 inches with a standard deviation of 0.6 inches, and the mean of Y is 2.25 inches with a standard deviation of 0.4 inches. What is the mean and standard deviation of the difference, D = X - Y?

D- uD= 0.25 inches and aD= 0.72 inches

The school board of a large school district would like to raise taxes in the district to pay for new computers. To see if there is support for a tax increase, they send a survey home with a random sample of students in the district. If the survey is not completed, calls are made to ensure responses are obtained from the parents of every selected student. The survey asks, "Would you be in favor of a modest tax increase to fund the purchase of new computers for all students?" The confidence interval for the true proportion of families that are in favor of a tax increase is 0.70 to 0.80. Members of the community who do not have children in the district complain about not being included in this study. Which of the following sources of bias affected the confidence interval, but is not included among the sources covered by the margin of error?

D- undercoverage bias

Does listening to music while running help runners run faster? Here are two designs involving a group of 20 competitive runners. I. Pair the runners by speed. Flip a coin to assign one runner in each pair to run a 5K while listening to music. The other runner does not listen to music. Compare difference (no music - music) in 5K times. II. Flip a coin for each runner. Let heads = run the 5K while listening to music. After the runner finishes, we record their time and they run the 5K again under the other treatment. Which matched pairs design is appropriate, if any? Why?

Design I is appropriate because the second design would confound fatigue with the effect of music.

A company that provides a free online language course wants to determine if learners would be willing to pay $12 per month for a premium version of the course. Which questions might lead to question wording bias? Check all that apply.

Do you think $12 is too much to pay for a premium version of the course? Would you pay $12 for a premium version of the course, given that learning a language has been shown to improve concentration skills and memory? Would you pay $12 for a premium version of the course even though it is currently free?

A data set contains the average salary for 100 professions. Alice has chosen a dotplot to display the data, and Joyce has chosen a stemplot to display the data. What advantage does Alice's display have over Joyce's display?

Dotplots allow for data to be sorted as values are plotted, while stemplots require values to be sorted before they are entered in the plot.

An employer wants to determine the amount of job satisfaction experienced by his employees. Which sampling method is most likely to result in undercoverage?

Employees are assigned to one of four pay scales. Randomly select a pay scale and survey every employee in that pay scale.

College administrators at a small, private college noticed that students who had higher high school GPAs tend to have higher college GPAs. What are the explanatory variable and response variable for this relationship?

Explanatory variable: high school GPAResponse variable: college GPA

College administrators at a small, private college noticed that students who had higher high school GPAs tend to have higher college GPAs. What are the explanatory variable and response variable for this relationship?

Explanatory variable: size of collegeResponse variable: college GPA -Explanatory variable: high school GPAResponse variable: college GPA Explanatory variable: college GPAResponse variable: high school GPA Explanatory variable: type of college (private vs. public)Response variable: college GPA

Machine engineers are designing a new ice machine for use in restaurants. They notice that designs that use cubes containing higher volumes of water take longer to freeze. What are the explanatory variable and response variable for this relationship?

Explanatory variable: volume of waterResponse variable: time to freeze

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the number of pieces in a brick-building set and the cost of a set. Information was collected from a survey and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 0.08x +1.20, where x represents the number of pieces in a set and ŷ is the predicted price (in dollars) of a set. Which statement best describes the meaning of the slope of the regression line?

For each increase in the number of pieces by 1, the predicted price increases by $0.08.

A dealership tracks the correlation between the age of its used cars and asking price for the car. The regression line is ŷ = 12,338 - 930x, where x is the age of the car, in years. Which statements are true regarding this model? Check all that apply.

For every one year in age, the price is predicted to decrease by $930. If the car is new, the car is predicted to cost $12,338.

Researchers conducted a study on the effects of exercise on mood. To form the sample, researchers went to a public mall and randomly selected a person who walked by to survey, and then they surveyed every 5th person after that until they had a sample of 30 people.

For the sampling procedure in this study, the researchers used cluster sampling X stratified random sampling ✔ systematic random sampling.

Researchers conducted a study on the effects of recess on elementary-student learning. To form the sample, researchers randomly selected elementary schools from across the country and included all students at each selected school.

For the sampling procedure in this study, the researchers used ✔ cluster sampling

Hannah and Claire each have a chicken coop with 6 hens. Let H represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day in Hannah's coop and let C represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day in Claire's coop. The two distributions are displayed in the table and histograms. Which statement correctly compares the centers of the distributions?

Hannah's hens appear to lay more eggs, on average, than Claire's hens.

At a large university, 20% of students are enrolled in the nursing program. The dean of students selects a random sample of 20 students and records n = the number of students enrolled in the nursing program. The dean decides to simulate this random process by using a random number table. He assigns the digits to the outcomes. 1 = student enrolled in nursing program 2-5 = student not enrolled in nursing program Skip 6-9 and 0 How can the dean use a random number table to simulate one trial of this situation?

He can select a row of the random number table and read 20 single digits between 1 and 5. He will record the number of digits that are a 1.

A professor wants to create an SRS of 15 out of his 185 students. He labels his subjects as follows: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, . . . 185 Which statements accurately describe his labels? Check all that apply.

He did not label properly; he should have stopped at label 184. He did not label properly; the labels do not contain the same number of digits.

type 1 error

Ho is rejected when it is actually true

What are the three basic types of hypothesis tests for the population proportion (p)?

Ho:p=po against: 1. Ha: p>po 2. Ha: p<po 3. Ha: p≠po

What are the three basic types of hypothesis tests for the population mean(μ) for two-sample problems?

Ho:μ1=μ2 or Ho:μ1-μ2=0 against: 1. Ha:μ1>μ2 or Ha:μ1-μ2>0 2. Ha:μ1<μ2 or Ha:μ1-μ2<0 3. Ha:μ1≠μ2 or Ha:μ1-μ2≠0

An animal rescue agent wanted to estimate the true proportion of all animals in shelters that are adopted each month. To do so, she selects a random sample of 100 animals and determines that the 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of animals adopted each month is between 0.12 and 0.24. Which of these statements is a correct interpretation of the confidence level?

If many random samples of size 100 are selected from all records of animals in shelters, approximately 95% of the intervals would capture the true proportion that were adopted.

A college professor would like to estimate the proportion of students who pull an "all-nighter," meaning they study all night for an upcoming exam. She selects a random sample of 100 students from her large college and finds that the 99% confidence interval for the true proportion of students who pull an all-nighter is 0.48 to 0.62. Which of these statements is a correct interpretation of the confidence level?

If many random samples of size 100 are selected from all students at this college, approximately 99% of the intervals would capture the true proportion who pull an all-nighter.

Heather runs a successful lawn-mowing business. She would like to estimate the true mean amount of time it takes for her employees to mow a lawn. To do so, she selects a random sample of 30 customers and records the time it takes the employees to mow their lawns. The 90% confidence interval for the true mean time it takes her employees to mow a lawn is 40 to 55 minutes. Which of these statements is a correct interpretation of the confidence level?

If many random samples of size 30 are selected from the population of all customers, approximately 90% of the constructed intervals would capture the true mean time it takes for her employees to mow a lawn.

The proportion of all high school students who watch national news is p = 0.57. A random sample of 60 high school students is selected. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of ?

In SRSs of size 60, the sample proportion of high school students who watch the national news typically varies 0.064 from the true proportion, p = 0.71.

The owner of an apple orchard knows that the average weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams. A random sample of 40 apples was selected, and the mean weight was 390 grams. Let μ = the true mean weight of the Granny Smith apples in the orchard. Under the assumption that the true mean weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams, 100 simulated means for samples of size 40 are shown in the dotplot. What does the dot above 371 represent?

In one simulated random sample of 40 Granny Smith apples, the mean weight of the sample was 371 grams.

A statistics teacher has a large container of beads that she says contains 60% blue beads. A student randomly selects 50 beads. Let p = the true proportion of blue beads in the container. Under the assumption that the true proportion is 0.60, the student generated 200 values of . What does the dot above 0.74 represent?

In one simulated sample of 50 beads the proportion of blue beads is 0.74.

A hospital employs 60 nurses. The hospital human resources director wants to understand what incentives motivate nurses to work various shifts. A random sample of 25 nurses was selected to receive an anonymous survey. Of those selected, 19 completed the survey.

In this scenario, the population is 19 nurses X 25 nurses ✔ 60 nursesall hospital employees. In this scenario, the sample is ✔ 19 nurses25 nurses 60 nurses all hospital employees.

A biologist is studying the migratory patterns of sandhill cranes. His study focuses only on sandhill cranes that are bred and hatched in Alaska, and eventually migrate south to warmer climates. Each year he randomly tags a sample of 50 cranes with GPS trackers to gather data about their migratory patterns.

In this scenario, the population is all sandhill cranes ✔ Alaskan-bred sandhill cranes50 tagged cranes. In this scenario, the sample is all sandhill cranes Alaskan-bred sandhill cranes ✔ 50 tagged cranes.

A student decides to spin a dime and determine the proportion of times it lands on heads. The student spins the dime 25 times and records that it lands on heads 17 times. Let p = the true proportion of times the dime would land on heads when spun. Under the assumption that the true proportion is 0.5, 100 simulated proportions for samples of size 25 are shown in the dotplot. Using the dotplot, what do the two dots above 0.70 represent?

In two simulated samples of 25 spins, the proportion of heads is 0.7.

A software company conducted a study about stress in the workplace for IT administrators. Which questions result in data that is categorical? Check all that appl

Is your job as an IT administrator stressful? What is your biggest source of stress? How has your job impacted your personal life? Have you ever considered switching careers because of on-the-job stress?

A college performs a survey of 424 randomly chosen graduates to estimate the proportion of alumni who are working in the field of their college degree. For example, if a student earned a degree in biology, do they work in the field of biology? Of the 424 alumni, 361 reported that they were working in the field of their college degree. A 98% confidence interval for the true proportion of graduates who are working in the field of their degree is (0.811, 0.892). What is the correct interpretation of the confidence interval?

It can be stated with 98% confidence that the proportion of all graduates who are working in the field of their degree is captured by the interval from 0.811 to 0.892.

Which statement(s) apply to stratified random sampling? Check all that apply.

It can provide better estimates than a simple random sample. The researcher needs some knowledge of the population in terms of characteristics relevant to the study. Creating strata of similar individuals to sample from reduces variability. It can be difficult to obtain with a very large population.

A biologist wants to create an SRS to study the effect of a medication on the respiration rate of his subjects. He places the ID number of each of the subjects into a box, shakes the box, and chooses 10 of the ID numbers without looking. Which statement best describes this sample?

It is both a random sample and an SRS.

Which statement(s) are accurate about cluster sampling? Check all that apply.

It is convenient because groups of individuals located near each other are sampled. It is a more cost-effective and less time-consuming way of sampling. Forming representative clusters can be challenging.

A beauty product company conducts a study to test the effectiveness of a new shampoo to control split ends. One hundred subjects have volunteered to take part in the study, and will be split into a treatment group and a placebo group. The study leader will assign the subjects to the groups randomly using slips of paper. Which reason identifies why randomization is important?

It is important that subject characteristics such as hair length, hair color, and gender are distributed equally among the treatment groups.

The histogram shows the distribution of registered roller skating rinks per state. Which statements appropriately interpret data from the histogram? Check all that apply.

It is most common for states to have 4 or fewer roller skating rinks. The median number of roller skating rinks is in the interval from 10 to 15. The distribution of roller skating rinks is skewed right.

Tessa conducts an experiment and obtains results that are statistically significant. What is meant by "statistically significant"?

It means that the results that Tessa obtained are too unusual to be explained by chance alone.

A principal of a large high school wants to estimate the true proportion of high school students who use the community's public library. To do so, he selects a random sample of 50 students and asks them if they use the community's public library. The 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of all students who use the community's public library is 0.25 to 0.34. If the principal had used a sample size of 200 students rather than 50 students, how would the length of the second interval compare to the original interval?

It would be half as wide.

A teacher would like to estimate the mean number of steps students take during the school day. To do so, she selects a random sample of 50 students and gives each one a pedometer at the beginning of the school day. They wear the pedometers all day and then return them to her at the end of the school day. From this, she computes the 98% confidence interval for the true mean number of steps students take during the school day to be 8,500 to 10,200. If the teacher had used a 90% confidence interval rather than a 98% confidence interval, what would happen to the width of the interval?

It would decrease, but not necessarily by 8%.

A farmer of a large apple orchard would like to estimate the true mean number of suitable apples produced per tree. He selects a random sample of 40 trees from his large orchard and determines with 95% confidence that the true mean number of suitable apples produced per tree is between 375 and 520 apples. If the farmer had selected 160 trees from his large apple orchard rather than 40 trees, what effect would this have had on the margin of error?

It would have been cut in half.

A college professor would like to estimate the proportion of students who pull an "all-nighter," meaning they study all night for an upcoming exam. She selects a random sample of 100 students from her large college and finds that the 99% confidence interval for the true proportion of students who have pulled an all-nighter to be 0.48 to 0.62. If the professor had randomly selected 50 students rather than 100 students, what effect would this have had on the width of the interval?

It would have been larger, but it would not have doubled.

A city planner would like to estimate the true mean annual income of all households in the city. She selects a random sample of 50 households and determines that the 99% confidence interval for the true mean annual income of all households in the city to be $42,000 to $68,000. If the city planner had selected 100 households rather than 50 households, what effect would this have had on the margin of error of the interval?

It would have been smaller, but it would not have been cut in half.

JT has two jobs. He mows yards and washes cars in his neighborhood. Let X represent the amount of weekly earnings for mowing yards, and let Y represent the amount of weekly earnings for washing cars. The mean of X is $60, and the mean of Y is $35. Which answer choice correctly calculates and interprets the mean of the sum, S = X + Y?

JT can expect to earn $95, on average, in a typical week.

The results of a study on state climate are shown below. What are the variables in the study? Check all that apply.

July Average High (°F) July Average Low (°F) Time Zone

A psychologist wants to create a simplified random sample of eight of his 920 subjects. He will use a random number table. Use this table of random digits. Begin with row 1, column 1 and use three-digit number pairs. Complete the statements outlining the steps that the psychologist should take

Label: Label the students from 0 to 8 1 to 8✔ 000 to 919000 to 920. Randomize: Skip numbers greater than 919 and ignore repeats. Stop after 1✔ 810 students are selected. Select: Select the individuals that correspond to the randomly selected numbers ✔ 002, 757, 117, 377, 648, 204, 527, 127X 002, 990, 757, 117, 377, 648, 204, 527299, 571, 377, 820, 271, 423, 265.

A music teacher wants to conduct a survey of practice time of her 30 students. He wants to select an SRS of six students using a random number table. Use this table of random digits. Begin with row 1, column 1 and use two-digit number pairs. Complete the statements outlining the steps that the music teacher should take.

Label: Label the students from 1 to 6 X 1 to 30 ✔ 00 to 2900 to 30. Randomize: Skip numbers greater than 06✔ 2930 and ignore repeats. Stop after six students are selected. Select: Select the individuals that correspond to the randomly selected numbers ✔ 07, 13, 28, 18, 25, 2307, 58, 13, 47, 28, 65X 00, 07, 05, 08, 01, 03.

At West High School, 10% of the students participate in sports. A student wants to simulate the act of randomly selecting 20 students and counting the number of students in the sample who participate in sports. What is an appropriate assignment of digits for this simulation?

Let 0 = the student participates in sports. Let 1-9 = the student does not participate in sports.

At a carnival, a customer notices that a prize wheel has 5 equal parts, one of which is labeled "winner." She would like to conduct a simulation to determine how many spins it would take for the wheel to land on "winner." What is an appropriate assignment of digits?

Let 0 and 1 = winner. Let 2-9 = not a winner.

Mrs. Bready has a large bag filled with red and green cards. She tells the class that 15% of the cards are red and 85% are green. At the end of each class, she mixes the cards, reaches inside the bag, and draws out one card at random. If a red card is drawn, the students will not be assigned homework. She shows the class the card, and then places the card back in the bag. Carla would like to carry out a simulation to estimate the number of days it will take in order to get a "no homework" day. What is an appropriate assignment of digits?

Let 00-14 = red. Let 15-99 = green.

At a large university, 20% of students are enrolled in the nursing program. The dean of students selects a random sample of 20 students and records n = the number of students enrolled in the nursing program. What is an appropriate assignment of digits to the outcomes for a simulation of this random process?

Let 1 = the student is enrolled in the nursing program. Let 2-5 = the student is not enrolled in the nursing program. Skip the digits 6-9, and 0.

In the 2018 Drake Relays, 20 high-school girls and 23 college women competed in the high jump finals. Megan's winning jump in the high-school competition had a z-score of 2.51. Janae's winning jump in the college competition had a z-score of 2.00. Which statement correctly compares the z-scores?

Megan's jump is more impressive because a positive z-score means that the jump was longer than the competitions' jumps, and her z-score is greater than Janae's.

Which is the best example of selecting a systematic random sample?

Members of a population are listed in order of birthday, and every 5th person is selected until a sample of 100 people is formed.

Which best describes the process of selecting a cluster sample?

Members of a population are organized in clusters, each of which is representative of the population, and then whole clusters are randomly selected to make up the sample.

An article in a psychology journal claims that young students who play a musical instrument tend to have higher test scores on state math exams. To assess the claim, a government official considers two methods to collect data. Method 1: Contact many city schools and ask them to provide summary data on state math exam performance and students who participate in music lessons. Method 2: Choose two city schools and provide free music lessons to students who register. At the end of the year, compare state math exam scores for students who participated in the music lessons with the scores for those who did not. Which method describes an observational study?

Method 1 is an observational study because past data are collected and analyzed.

A health organization collects data on hospitals in a large metropolitan area. The scatterplot shows the relationship between two variables the organization collected: the number of beds each hospital has available and the average number of days a patient stays in the hospital (mean length of stay). Which statement best explains the relationship between the variables shown?

More complex medical cases are often taken by larger hospitals, which increases the lengths of stay for larger hospitals.

A volleyball player's serving percentage is 75%. Six of her serves are randomly selected. Using the table, what is the probability that at most 4 of them were successes?

NOT A

Given the spinner below in which all regions are equal, which of the following point scales would result in a favorable game?

NOT A

Two students devised a game called "3 Pennies & 2 Nickels." Each player will choose to play the pennies or the nickels. In each round, the players will flip all their coins on the table and record how many heads and tails they have. The table below includes the point scheme.

NOT A

The time needed for passengers to board the Twisting Thunder roller coaster is skewed right with a mean of 49 seconds and a standard deviation of 7.1 seconds. The time to board the Spiral Wonder roller coaster is skewed left with a mean of 44.8 seconds and a standard deviation of 3.7 seconds. What is the probability in a random sample of 32 times loading Twisting Thunder and 36 times loading Spiral Wonder that the mean time for Twisting Thunder is less than that of Spiral Wonder?

NOT A, probably D

A ceiling fan manufacturer claims that 89% of homes in the South have ceiling fans. A random sample of 100 Southern homes was surveyed, and 85 had ceiling fans. Let P= the proportion of the sample homes that have ceiling fans. The probability that 85% or fewer homes in the South have ceiling fans is 0.098. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the manufacturer's claim?

NOT B

The mean price of houses in the US is $383,500. A real estate agent believes the mean price of houses in a local neighborhood is less than the national mean. The agent takes a random sample of 30 houses and finds the mean price to be $295,089 with a standard deviation of $156,321. The real estate agent conducts a significance test with the alpha level for the mean price of houses in the neighborhood being less than $383,500. The P-value for this significance test is 0.002. What is the correct interpretation of the P-value?

NOT B

A construction company has two divisions: ceilings and floors. The amount of revenue for the ceiling division, C, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of $2.6 million per year and a standard deviation of $0.9 million per year. The amount of revenue for the flooring division, F, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of $3.1 million per year and a standard deviation of $1.1 million per year. Assume C and F are independent random variables. What is the probability that the ceiling division makes more revenue than the flooring division in a randomly selected year?

NOT C

A medical study is conducted to determine which migraine treatment, A or B, provides faster relief. The study uses 10 volunteers who claim to suffer from migraines. Half of the volunteers are randomly assigned to use treatment A when they experience their first migraine. The other half are assigned to use treatment B. Then, after no treatment for one month, the treatments are reversed. The volunteers each record the amount of time it takes, in minutes, to experience relief from their migraine under each treatment. The data are displayed in the table. A 99% confidence interval for the mean difference (A - B) in the time it takes to experience relief is -8.37 minutes to 0.732 minutes. Based on the confidence interval, is it reasonable to claim that treatment A provides faster relief than treatment B?

NOT C

A statistics teacher is interested in whether there is a difference in the accuracy of dominant versus nondominant hands. She asks her students to roll a ball, once with each hand, toward a target. The students then measure the distance, in centimeters, between the ball and the target. Students will determine which hand they use first by tossing a coin. The differences (nondominant - dominant) in the distances for each student are listed. 28, -13, 25, 41, -14, 21, 12, -10, 17, 26, 32, 27, -5, 18, 10, 22, -19, 4, 31, 19 Are the conditions for inference met?

NOT C

A bottled water company runs a promotion in which 1 out of every 5 bottles has the word "Winner" printed under the cap. Winners receive a free bottle of water. A store owner notices that in the last 8 bottles of water purchased, 3 have been winners. What is the probability of getting 3 "Winner" caps on 8 bottles of water?

NOT D

Alicia and Bennie have decided to play a game. They each draw as many flowers on paper as they can within one minute, repeating this game many times. The number of flowers Alicia draws and the number of flowers Bennie draws are independent. The number of flowers Alicia draws within 1 minute, A, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 38 flowers and a standard deviation of 1.8 flowers. The number of flowers Bennie draws in 1 minute, B, is approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 41 and a standard deviation of 2.6 flowers. Let D represent the difference, A - B, in the number of Alicia's and Bennie's flowers drawn in 1 minute. What is the probability that Alicia draws fewer flowers than Bennie in any 1 minute?

NOT D

An experiment is conducted to estimate the difference in work productivity for employees under two conditions: with and without music playing in the background. Twenty employees volunteered to be part of the study. Ten of the volunteers were randomly assigned to work for one week with music playing in the background. The other 10 volunteers worked for one week without music playing in the background. Productivity is measured by counting the number of units produced for the week. A 99% confidence interval for the difference in the population means is (1.525, 7.275). What is the interpretation of this interval?

NOT D

A certain airline has a 90% probability that its flights are on time. Fifteen of this airline's flights leave the local airport each day. Let X represent the number of flights that are on time each day. Assuming flights are on time independently of one another, what is the shape of the probability histogram of X?

NOT approximately symmetric

A statistics teacher has a large container of beads that she says contains 60% blue beads. A student randomly selects 50 beads, and 25 of them were blue. Let p = the true proportion of blue beads in the container. Under the assumption that the true proportion is 0.60, the student generated 200 values of . Is there evidence that the true proportion of blue beads in the container is less than 0.60?

No, a proportion of 0.5 is only 0.1 less than a proportion of 0.6; therefore, there is insufficient evidence that the true proportion of blue beads in the container is less than 0.6.

A clinic measured the systolic blood pressure for a random sample of 10 patients. The resulting 95% confidence interval for the mean systolic blood pressure of all the patients at this clinic was (111.3, 129.5). A doctor commented that, on average, the patients at this clinic have high blood pressure, which is defined as blood pressure over 130. Based on the confidence interval, is the doctor's statement justified?

No, because 130 is greater than the upper bound of the confidence interval.

When people are discharged from a hospital, they are surveyed about the quality of their stay. The hospital asks each person to turn in the survey before leaving. Is this a simple random sample?

No, because each person is asked to fill out the survey, so this is not a sample.

A hotel rewards club wants to randomly select 100 of its 5,000 members to participate in a survey. The club wants to determine if people's opinions differ based on age. There are 2,200 members between the ages of 25 and 50, and there are 2,800 who are age 51 or older. The club decides to randomly select 44 members between the ages of 25 and 50, and 56 members ages 51 and older. Is the sample of 100 members a simple random sample?

No, because each sample of 100 does not have the same chance of being selected.

A coin is flipped 25 times, and we would like to know the probability that 15 or more of those flips are heads side up. Is it appropriate to use the geometric distribution to calculate probabilities in this situation?

No, because it is not looking for the first occurrence of success.

A school principal claims the graduation rate at a school is 96%. Molly, a student at this school, takes a random sample of students and finds the 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of students graduating from this school is (0.934, 0.983). Is it reasonable to conclude the principal's claim is incorrect?

No, because the interval contains 0.96

A local dentist is concerned that less than half of her patients floss daily. A 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of her patients who floss daily is (0.325, 0.701). Is it reasonable to believe that less than half of her patients floss daily?

No, because there are values in the interval greater than 0.50.

A technology company claims that 13% of customers who call the help desk cannot log in because they have their keyboard on caps lock, which blocks the log in process due to password case sensitivity. Brian, a help desk worker at this company, thinks this proportion is higher. The 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of customers who cannot log in due to caps lock is (0.128, 0.185). Is it reasonable to believe the true proportion of customers who cannot log in due to caps lock is greater than 13%?

No, because there are values in the interval that are less than 0.13

A recent report stated that over half of food delivery drivers eat some of the food they are delivering. A 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of food delivery drivers who eat some of the food they are delivering is (0.398, 0.706). Is it reasonable to believe more than half of food delivery drivers eat some of the food they are delivering?

No, because there are values less than 0.50 in the interval

At a 95% confidence interval for p, the proportion of all US adults who exercise regularly is 0.562 to 0.684. Is it reasonable to believe more than two-thirds of US adults exercise regularly?

No, because there are values less than 0.667 in the interval.

A child is playing a card game where, if she does not have a red card in her hand, she must draw cards from the deck, and keep the cards she draws, until she draws a red card. Is it appropriate to use the geometric distribution to calculate probabilities in this situation?

No, since each trial is not independent of the other trials.

At a local college, an admissions officer wants to survey the incoming class of 500 first-year students concerning their preference of major. The officer randomly selects 100 of them to complete the survey, and finds that 45 are planning to major in liberal arts. The admissions officer uses the data to construct a 95% confidence interval for the proportion of first-year students who are planning on majoring in liberal arts. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the 10% condition is not met.

In a small town of 5,832 people, the mayor wants to determine the proportion of voters who would support an increase to the food tax. An assistant to the mayor decides to survey 1,000 randomly chosen people to construct a 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of people who would support the increase in food tax. Of the sample, 363 people say they would support the increase. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the 10% condition is not met.

A local school board wants to estimate the difference in the proportion of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 38 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. The school board plans to construct a 90% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of households who would support starting the school year a week earlier. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the Large Counts Condition is not met.

A student believes that a certain number cube is unfair and is more likely to land with a six facing up. The student rolls the number cube 15 times, and finds that the cube lands with a six facing up five times. The student wants to construct a 99% confidence interval for the proportion of times this number cube lands with a six facing up. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the Large Counts Condition is not met.

A real estate agent in a large city claims to sell 15% of their houses within two months of the original listing. A random sample of 75 listings is chosen, and 9 were sold within two months of the original listing. Let = the proportion of houses in the random sample that were sold within two months. The probability of 12% or fewer of this real estate agent's listings being sold within two months is 0.295. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the agent's claim?

No, the difference between the sample result and what is expected is not extreme enough. The probability of it occurring by chance alone is not unlikely.

A biology student wanted to determine if using fertilizer would promote plant growth. The student randomly selected 20 plants and randomly assigned 10 of them to a large square container and the other 10 to a different large square container. Both containers had the same amount of soil and received the same amount of water and light. One container also received fertilizer and the other container did not. Is this a valid experimental design?

No, the experiment did not use replication of the experimental units.

The ages of the 5 officers for a school club are 18, 18, 17, 16, and 15. The standard deviation of the distribution of ages is 1.17. The table displays all possible samples of size 2 and the corresponding ranges for each sample. Using the values in the table, is the sample standard deviation an unbiased estimator?

No, the mean of the sample standard deviations is 1.13, which is not the same as 1.17.

In a game of darts, there are 20 sectors on a target, and a smaller circular "bullseye" in the center. In this particular game, a player must correctly call "low," consisting of the sectors numbered 1-10; "high," consisting of the sectors numbered 11-20; or "bullseye," depending on what they are trying to hit. If they hit the section they call, they are a winner. A player will attempt to hit "low" on the first throw, then will attempt to hit "high" on the second throw, then will attempt to hit "bullseye" on the third throw, and so on until hitting the section they called. Is it appropriate to use the geometric distribution to calculate probabilities in this situation?

No, the probability of success is not the same for each of the trials.

A certain dog can catch a properly thrown tennis ball with a probability of 0.95. Unfortunately, this dog has dropped the last six properly thrown tennis balls. The owner explains that the next throw has to be caught by the dog because he never misses this many. Is the owner's reasoning correct?

No, the probability of the dog catching a properly thrown tennis ball is 0.95 over the long run, so the owner cannot say what will happen on the next throw.

A computer company wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of defective computer chips in a day's production from two different production plants, A and B. A quality control specialist takes a sample of 100 chips from the first hour of production from plant A and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a sample of 100 chips from the last hour of production from plant B and determines that there are 10 defective chips. He wants to construct a 90% confidence interval for the true difference in proportions of defective chips from a day's production between the two plants. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the randomness condition is not met.

A computer company wants to determine the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production. A quality control specialist takes a sample of 100 chips from the first hour of production and determines that there are 12 defective chips. He wants to construct a 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of defective chips from a day's production. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the randomness condition is not met.

A teacher has a large container filled with blue, red, and green beads. She wants her students to estimate the proportion of red beads. Each student shakes the container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. One student's sample contained 19 red beads. The students are asked to construct a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of red beads in the container. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the randomness condition is not met.

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads. He wants his students to estimate the difference in the proportion of red beads in each container. Each student shakes the first container, selects 25 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The students repeat this process for the second container. One student sampled 10 red beads from the first container and 8 red beads from the second container. The students are asked to construct a 95% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of red beads in each container. Are the conditions for inference met?

No, the randomness condition is not met.

A statistics student is interested in the relationship between the number of aunts and uncles a person has and the number of cousins. She surveys a simple random sample of 12 people and asks them how many of each they have. She calculates the least-squares regression line and finds the equation is ŷ = 2.6 +1.64x, where ŷ is the number of cousins and x is the number of aunts and uncles. The residual plot is shown. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, the residuals are relatively large. No, there is a clear pattern in the residual plot. -Yes, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. Yes, about half of the residuals are positive and half are negative.

An educator is interested in the relationship between how many hours students spend doing homework and the scores earned on exams. He gathers data from 12 students and calculates the least-squares regression line to be ŷ = 68.4 + 1.46x, where ŷ is the score on an exam and x is the number of hours spent doing homework. The residual plot is shown. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, the residuals are relatively large. No, there is a clear pattern in the residual plot. -Yes, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. Yes, about half of the residuals are positive and half are negative.

A statistics student is interested in the relationship between the size of a pizza (the diameter measured in inches) and its price. He collects a random sample of pizzas from several local restaurants. He finds a linear model to give the relationship between the size of the pizza and the price. The equation of the line is ŷ = -8.1 + 1.91x, where ŷ is the price and x is the diameter. The residual plot is shown. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, there is a clear pattern in the residual plot.

A real estate agent is interested in the relationship between the size of a home (measured in square feet) and the selling price of the home. She collects a simple random sample of nine homes in her area and records the size and price of each house. She finds a linear model to give the relationship between the size of the home (measured in thousands of square feet) and the selling price of the home (measured in thousands of dollars). The equation of the line is ŷ =5102 + 112x, where ŷ is the selling price of the home and x is the square footage. The residual plot is shown. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. -Yes, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. No, most of the residuals are positive. Yes, the residuals are relatively large.

Janice is considering buying a new home. She wants to estimate the monthly utilities (heating and air conditioning). She figures that the utilities are dependent on the size (square footage) of the home. She collects data on 10 homes in the neighborhood and finds a linear model to give the relationship between the size of the home and the monthly utilities. The equation of the line is ŷ = -8.1 + 1.91x, where ŷ is the mean monthly cost in utilities and x is the square footage of the home. The residual plot is shown. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. -Yes, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. No, there are no homes between 2,300 and 2,900 square feet. Yes, half of the residuals are positive and half are negative.

A nutritionist is curious about how the concentration of a vitamin supplement changes as a function of time (in hours) since a pill has been swallowed. The nutritionist measures the concentration for six hours after the pill was swallowed. He calculates the equation of the least-squares regression line as ŷ = 0.0093 - 0.00121xwhere ŷ is the concentration and x is the number of hours since the pill was swallowed. The graph shown is the residual plot for this model where the residuals are measured in parts per thousand. Based on the residual plot, is the linear model appropriate?

No, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. Yes, there is no clear pattern in the residual plot. -No, there is a clear pattern in the residual plot, indicating that the linear model is not appropriate. Yes, clearly the concentration of the vitamin decreases for the first three hours and then increases after that.

A produce manufacturer fills bags of baby carrots by weight. Each bag is supposed to have 12 ounces of baby carrots. Unfortunately, 3% of the baby carrots are discolored. Let X represent the number of discolored baby carrots in a bag. Are the conditions for a binomial setting in this scenario met?

No, there is no fixed number of baby carrots.

Alex's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.28 minutes and a standard deviation of 0.38 seconds. Chris's times for running a mile are Normally distributed with a mean time of 5.45 seconds and a standard deviation of 0.2 seconds. Ten of Alex's times and 15 of Chris's times are randomly selected. Let represent the difference in the mean times for Alex and Chris. Which of the following represents the shape of the sampling distribution for xA-xC?

Normal, because both population distributions are Normal.

A sunscreen manufacturer tests a new water-resistant sunscreen by finding 120 volunteers at a community pool. The subjects are randomly assigned to one of two groups by drawing either a 1 or 2 marked on slips of equal-sized paper from a bag. Half of the subjects use an old formulation, and half use the new formulation over an 8-hour time frame on the same sunny day. Test administrators apply a measured amount of sunscreen to each subject at the beginning of the day and reapply it at regular intervals throughout the day. Test subjects are asked to remain in unshaded areas as much as possible during the test. The levels of sunburn are compared at the end of the day. Which of the following represent controls in the experiment? Check all that apply.

Number of hours of sun exposure Amount of sunscreen applied Intervals of sunscreen application

Tonya and Emily each have an online jewelry store. Let T represent the amount of money Tonya earns daily, and let E represent the amount of money Emily earns daily. The mean difference, D = T - E, of the amount of money that Tonya and Emily earn on a typical day is $312. What is the correct interpretation of this value?

On average, Tonya makes $312 more than Emily on a typical day.

Let A represent the battery life of a brand A laptop, and let B represent the battery life of a brand B laptop. The mean difference in battery life between these two brands of laptops, D = A - B, is -3.25 hours. What is the correct interpretation of this value?

On average, brand B's battery life lasts 3.25 hours longer than brand A.

A whale researcher in California recorded the lengths of a sample of blue whales and of fin whales. The histograms show his findings. Use this graphic to answer the question. Which statements correctly compare the histograms? Check all that apply.

Overall, blue whales are longer than fin whales. Blue whales tend to be about 20 feet longer than fin whales.

The grade distribution for students in the introductory statistics class at a local community college are displayed in the table. In this table, A = 4, B = 3, etc. Let X represent the grade for a randomly selected student. Which of the following correctly represents the probability that a randomly selected student has a grade higher than a C?

P(X > 2)

Which statements describe the data in the bar graph? Check all that apply.

People prefer pop music to any other type of music. The least favorite genre of music is blues. Four times as many people prefer pop music to blues.

An exit poll shows how certain parties voted on Proposition #1. Explain how the given graph is deceptive. Complete the statements based on the pie chart. Pie charts are used to compare

Pie charts are used to compare parts of a whole not ✔ the difference between groups. This misleads the viewer to think more than✔ less than half the people in all three parties voted Yes on Issue #1, when ✔ more than half of Republicans and Independents actually voted Yes on Issue #1.

An outlier is a data value that differs greatly from other values in a data set. Which is the outlier rule for the lower boundary?

Q1 − 1.5 ∙ IQR

An outlier is a data value that differs greatly from other values in a data set. Which is the outlier rule for the upper boundary?

Q3 + 1.5 ∙ IQR

At a carnival, a customer notices that a prize wheel has 5 equal parts, one of which is labeled "winner." She would like to conduct a simulation to determine how many spins it would take for the wheel to land on "winner." She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0, 1 = winner 2-9 = not a winner How can a random number table be used to simulate one trial of this situation?

Read single-digit numbers until finding the first 0 or 1. Count the number of digits needed to get the first 0 or 1.

Mrs. Bready has a large bag filled with red and green cards. She tells the class that 15% of the cards are red and 85% are green. At the end of each class, she mixes the cards, reaches inside the bag, and draws out one card at random. If a red card is drawn, the students will not be assigned homework. She shows the class the card, and then places the card back in the bag. Carla would like to carry out a simulation to estimate the number of days it will take in order to get a "no homework" day. She assigns the digits to the outcomes. 00-14 = red 15-99 = green How can a random number table be used to simulate one trial of this situation?

Read two-digit numbers. Count the number of two-digit pairs needed to find the first day for which no homework is assigned.

A director of a company notices that there is a nonlinear relationship between the company's sales revenue and customer satisfaction. Here are the data for the past six months. Examine the scatterplots provided in this graphic. Which one correctly displays these data?

Scatterplot C

Which of the following is an advantage of picking samples using stratified random sampling?

Stratified random sampling reduces sampling variability.

Which statements about segmented and side-by-side bar graphs are true? Choose two correct answers.

Segmented and side-by-side bar graphs summarize the data distribution for two or more categorical variables. Segmented and side-by-side bar graphs can summarize conditional relative frequencies.

At West High School, 10% of the students participate in sports. A student wants to simulate the act of randomly selecting 20 students and counting the number of students in the sample who participate in sports. The student assigns the digits to the outcomes. 0 = student participates in sports 1-9 = student does not participate in sports. How can a random number table be used to simulate one trial of this situation?

Select a row from the random number table. Read 20 single digits. Count the number of digits that are zeros

A large home improvement store is considering expanding its selection of moving products, such as cardboard boxes and packing tape. The store constructs a 90% confidence interval to estimate the proportion of all customers who have moved houses at least once in the last five years. In the random sample of 620 customers, 201 (32.4%) replied that they had moved at least once in the last five years. The sample yielded the 90% confidence interval (0.293, 0.355) for the proportion of all customers who have moved in the past five years. Sheldon, an employee who wishes to expand the selection of moving products, claims that more than 1 in 4 customers have moved in the past five years. Zachary, another employee, urges Sheldon to be bolder in his claim and say that more than 1 in 3 customers have moved in the past five years. Based on the confidence interval, which employee's claim is plausible?

Sheldon's claim is plausible, but it is not certain that Zachary's is plausible

A human resources director collected data on employees' salaries at her company. The z-score of Sheri's salary is 1.253. Which statement best interprets this z-score?

Sheri's salary is 1.253 standard deviations above the mean salary, so she earns more than the average salary.

A jar contains 11 red marbles, 12 blue marbles, and 6 white marbles. Four marbles from this jar are selected, with each marble being replaced after each selection. What is the expected number of draws until the first red marble?

Since 11/29 of the marbles are red, 29/11 draws are expected until a red marble is drawn.

A computer technician notes that 40% of computers fail because of the hard drive, 20% fail due to the processor, 15% of problems are with the keyboard, and 5% of problems are due to something else. What is the mean of the number of computers he will work on before seeing his first computer that has failed because of the hard drive?

Since 40% is equivalent to 2/5 , it is expected that 5/2=2.5 computers until one has failed due to the hard drive.

As a project for math class, two students devised a game in which 3 black marbles and 2 red marbles are put into a bag. First the players must decide who is playing black marbles and who is playing red marbles. Then each player takes a turn at drawing a marble, noting the color, replacing the marble in the bag, and then drawing a second marble and noting the color before returning it to the bag. The point scheme for the game is detailed in the table below. If Seth is challenged to a game by a classmate, which statement below is correct in all aspects in helping him make the correct choice?

Since E(black) = 0.24 and E(red) = 0.16, Seth should choose to play black marbles.

A student decides to spin a dime and determine the proportion of times it lands on heads. The student spins the dime 25 times and records that it lands on heads 17 times. He decides to spin the dime again and spins it 100 times. Which of the following is a correct statement about the variability of the sampling distribution?

Since the sample size is increased, the variability will decrease.

A newspaper collected information on schools in its circulation area in order to compare their quality. Two measures the newspaper collected for each school, mean class size and mean score on a statewide reading exam, are shown in the scatterplot. One school in the report, Springside Elementary, is labeled in the graph. Which is a true statement regarding Springside?

Springside does not affect the correlation. -Springside weakens the correlation shown in the scatterplot. Springside strengthens the correlation shown in the scatterplot. Removing Springside would increase the value of the correlation coefficient.

Which histogram represents the data set with the smallest standard deviation?

Squad 3

A university wants to survey students to gather opinions regarding a tuition increase for their online degree programs. Which survey method is most likely to lead to nonresponse bias in the sample?

Station interviewers at high-traffic areas near the student center to administer the survey to students trying to get to class.

Researchers conducted a study on the effects of practice time of athletes on their endurance. To form the sample, researchers grouped the population by sport and then randomly selected 25 athletes from each group. Which statement identifies the sampling procedure used and gives a valid reason?

Stratified random sampling: subjects were randomly selected from each sport.

A college professor conducts an experiment to determine if students perform better on exams when they study alone or in small groups. A total of 150 students taking an introduction to sociology course volunteer to participate in the study. Students are randomly assigned either to study alone for an upcoming exam or are assigned to a study group. The exam grades are then compared. Which of the following accurately describes the benefit of random assignment in the experiment?

Students of different abilities are more likely to be evenly distributed, so any differences observed in the exam grades are more likely to be a result of the treatment.

A men's basketball coach would like to know if there is a relationship between how tall a player is and how high he can jump. Here is a scatterplot of the data. Which statement is true?

Taller basketball players tend to jump higher than shorter basketball players.

The table shows the percent of successful unmanned missions to Mars by each country or agency to the nearest tenth of a percent. Use this graphic to answer the questions. Based o

The USSR/Russia launched 13.6 percent of successful unmanned Mars missions.

In early 2019, the US rate of recycling plastic water bottles was only 23%. A government agency designs an expensive program to increase the recycling rate. The program will be tested in Texas and, if successful, it will be used nationally. A hypothesis test is conducted with H0: The proportion of water bottles that are recycled is still 23% after the program, and Ha: The proportion of water bottles that are recycled is more than 23% after the program. What is a Type I error and its consequence in this context?

The agency concludes that the program increases the recycling rate, when in fact it does not. The program will be implemented at great cost without increasing the rate of water bottle recycling.

A trucking company wants to evaluate whether a decrease in the weight of their trucks helps to increase gas mileage. The company randomly selects 100 of their truck drivers, driving trucks that are identical in every way other than weight, to monitor gas mileage over a 1-year period. Results showed an association between truck weight and gas mileage. Which is a possible confounding variable for the provided scenario?

The aggressiveness of the driver's driving style

The value of s for a relationship between number of seconds, x, and number of jumping jacks of an athlete, y, is calculated as 3.0725. Which of the following statements is the best interpretation of s?

The average residual is about 3.0725 jumping jacks.

A political candidate feels that she performed particularly well in the most recent debate against her opponent. Her campaign manager polled a random sample of 400 likely voters before the debate and a random sample of 500 likely voters after the debate. The 95% confidence interval for the true difference (post-debate minus pre-debate) in proportions of likely voters who would vote for this candidate was (-0.014, 0.064). What is the correct interpretation of the 95 percent confidence interval?

The candidate can be 95% confident that the percentage of likely voters who would vote for her did not increase, since the confidence interval contains 0.

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let A represent the score on a randomly selected exam for subject A and let B represent the score on a randomly selected exam for subject B. The distributions of scores for each subject's standardized tests are displayed in the table and the histograms. Which statement correctly compares the centers of the distributions?

The center for the distribution of scores appears to be higher for subject B than for subject A

A restaurant is introducing a new gluten-free recipe for the topping in its baked zucchini recipe. The chef will continue to use this topping if less than 8% of her customers complain about the new taste. Using a random sample of customers, she conducts a hypothesis test with H0: The complaint rate is 8%, and Ha: The complaint rate is less than 8%. What is a Type I error and its consequence in this context?

The chef believes the complaint rate is less than 8%, when in fact it is not less than 8%. The chef continues to use the new recipe but experiences a large number of unsatisfied customers.

A restaurant is introducing a new gluten-free recipe for the topping in its baked zucchini recipe. The chef will continue to use this topping if less than 8% of her customers complain about the new taste. Using a random sample of customers, she conducts a hypothesis test with H0: The complaint rate is 8%, and Ha: The complaint rate is less than 8%. What is a Type II error and its consequence in this context?

The chef believes the complaint rate is not less than 8%, when in fact it is less than 8%. The chef would not use the new recipe, potentially losing customers who need gluten-free menu options.

A yogurt company claims that it prints a free yogurt coupon under a randomly selected 20% of its lids. A loyal customer purchases 85 yogurt cups, and records whether each was a winner. After consuming all 85 cups, he is disappointed to see that only 12 (14.1%) of his yogurt cups contained coupon codes. He performs a 99% confidence interval for the proportion of yogurt cups containing coupon codes, obtaining (0.044, 0.238). What conclusion can the customer draw about the yogurt company's claim?

The company's claim may be justified because 0.2 is in the confidence interval.

In an experiment to test the effectiveness of an energy supplement, participants are randomly assigned to groups by using a table of random digits. Which of the following best describes the control group in the experiment?

The control group is the group who received protein bars without the energy supplement.

Movie critics claim that 68% of adults and 79% of teenagers would recommend seeing the newest action movie. Suppose a random sample of 43 adults and 52 teenagers is selected. Let and be the sample proportions of adult and teenage moviegoers, respectively, who would recommend this movie. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of PA-PT?

The difference (adult - teenager) in the sample proportions of those who would recommend this action movie varies about 0.091 from the true difference in proportions.

At a local veterinary office, 48% of dogs get their teeth cleaned, while 35% of cats get their teeth cleaned. Let and be the sample proportions of dogs and cats at this veterinary office, respectively, who get their teeth cleaned. Suppose 25 dogs and 32 cats from this veterinary office are selected at random to collect data on their teeth-cleaning history. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of ?

The difference (dogs - cats) in the sample proportions of those that get their teeth cleaned typically varies about 0.131 from the true difference in proportions.

The line of best fit is also called the least-squares regression line. Which statement best explains that name?

The line is located on a scatterplot so that it minimizes the squared distances from the points to the line.

In a large high school, 37% of the teachers believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. However, 89% of the students believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Let and be the sample proportions of teachers and students, respectively, who believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes. Suppose 28 teachers and 100 students are selected at random and asked their opinion on the amount of time students have to change class. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of ?

The difference (faculty — student) in the sample proportions of those who believe that five minutes is not enough time for students to change classes typically varies about 0.096 from the true difference in proportions.

Agriculturists in a certain state claim that 43% of the residents in the northern portion of the state prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas, while 59% of the residents in the southern portion of the state prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas. Suppose random samples of 33 northerners and 41 southerners are selected. Let and be the sample proportions of northern and southern residents of this state, respectively, who would prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of PN-PS?

The difference (northern - southern) in the sample proportions of those who prefer flour tortillas over corn tortillas typically varies about 0.115 from the true difference in proportions.

At a large, rural high school, 21% of sophomores have an allergy to ragweed, while 17% of seniors have one. Let PF and PS be the sample proportions of sophomores and seniors, respectively, who have an allergy to ragweed. Suppose 50 sophomores and 62 seniors from this school are selected at random and asked if they have an allergy to ragweed. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of PF-PS?

The difference (sophomores - seniors) in the sample proportions of those who have an allergy to ragweed typically varies about 0.075 from the true difference in proportions.

In state A, 73% of residents watch cooking shows regularly, while only 51% of state B residents watch cooking shows regularly. Let pA and pB be the sample proportions of state A residents and state B residents, respectively, who watch cooking shows regularly. Suppose 119 state A residents and 96 state B residents are selected at random and asked if they watch cooking shows regularly. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of pA-pB?

The difference (state A residents - state B residents) in the sample proportions of those who watch cooking shows regularly typically varies about 0.065 from the true difference in proportions.

At a large university, 68% of the students have a laptop, while only 43% of professors have one. Let pS and pP be the sample proportions of students and professors, respectively, who have a laptop. Suppose 56 students and 31 professors from this university are selected at random and asked if they have a laptop. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of pS-pP?

The difference (student - professor) in the sample proportions of those who have a laptop typically varies about 0.109 from the true difference in proportions.

The five-number summary of a data set is given below. Minimum: 3 Q1: 12 Median: 15 Q3: 16 Maximum: 20 Which of the following is a true statement about outliers for this distribution?

The distribution's minimum is an outlier.

A doctor wants to determine if a new medication for cholesterol is more effective than the previous medication. The doctor asks her patients if they would like to take part in a study for a new medication, and 30 patients currently taking medication for cholesterol volunteer to participate. Which of the following would be an appropriate procedure for this experiment?

The doctor needs to randomly assign 15 patients to the new medication and 15 to the original medication to even out the variability between the patients.

In an experiment to test the effectiveness of an energy supplement, participants are randomly assigned to groups by using a table of random digits. Which of the following accurately describes the benefit of comparison in the experiment shown in the design web?

The energy levels of those in the treatment group and in the control group can be compared to determine if the ingredient had a significant effect.

A speed training service wants to explore the effectiveness of some of the classes offered to their clients. They randomly select 300 high school athletes and record their 50-meter dash time. The 300 high school athletes are then randomly assigned to three groups with 100 in each. One hundred athletes will take a circuit training class, 100 athletes will take an interval training class, and 100 athletes will take a plyometrics training class. At the end of 10 weeks of taking these classes, their 50-meter dash time will be recorded a second time. Their times will be analyzed to see which class showed the greatest overall improvement in times. Select all the sentences that correctly identify the components of the experiment.

The experimental units are subjects. There are three treatments. One treatment is a circuit training class. The factor is the type of class.

A pharmaceutical company is interested in comparing four brands of sleep medication to see which brand is best at relieving sleep pattern symptoms, primarily insomnia. The participants are 80 people with sleep pattern symptoms. They are randomly assigned to four groups of 20 participants. Each group receives one of the four brands of sleep medication. The improvement in the sleep pattern of the 80 participants is recorded 6 weeks after taking the medication and the average improvement is compared among the four treatment groups. What are the factor(s) and level(s) of this scenario?

The factor is the ✔ sleep medication The levels are the 6 weeks of the experiment✔ 4 different treatments, or medications

To be considered 18-karat (18K) gold, a piece of jewelry must be made of 75% pure gold. The higher the karats, the more valuable a piece of jewelry. A jewelry designer is purchasing a large quantity of 18K gold from a new supplier. To see if the new supplier is being dishonest about the karat rating in the shipment, the designer melts a random sample of the gold and conducts a hypothesis test with H0: The proportion of metal that is gold is 75%, and Ha: The proportion of metal that is gold is less than 75%. What is a Type I error and its consequence in this context?

The gold shipment truly is made of 75% gold, but the designer concludes that it is made of less than 75% gold. The designer will reject the shipment of gold and miss out on an honest business relationship with the supplier.

A guidance counselor is studying test anxiety in freshman students. A random sample of 972 high school freshmen finds that 219 of these students have had some form of test anxiety. A 95% confidence interval for the proportion of freshmen with test anxiety is (0.199, 0.252). Which statement correctly interprets the interval?

The guidance counselor can be 95% confident that the interval from 0.199 to 0.252 captures the true proportion of all freshmen who have test anxiety.

The mean and standard deviation of the daily high temperatures were calculated in three cities for the month of September 2018. The z-score for the high temperature on September 19 for each city, relative to that city's mean, is given. Tempe, AZ: -2.94 Ankeny, IA: 0.45 Lubec, ME: -0.98 Which statements correctly compare the z-scores? Choose three correct answers.

The high temperature on September 19 in Tempe was the most abnormal. Only Ankeny's high temperature was warmer than the mean; Tempe and Lubec's high temperatures were colder than the mean. The high temperature on September 19 in Ankeny was the closest to the mean.

A study is being conducted on the number of people who frequent a certain breakfast buffet and how often they visit the buffet during a six-month period. Complete the statements based on the information.

The individuals in the study are the location of the breakfast buffet ✔ people who visit the breakfast buffetnames of the six months in the study. The variable in the study is the ✔ number of times a person visits the buffet in six monthsduration of time a person stays at the buffet cost of the buffet.

An inspector inspects large truckloads of potatoes to determine the proportion with blemishes prior to using the potatoes to make potato chips. She intends to compute a 95% confidence interval for this proportion. To do so, she selects a simple random sample of 90 potatoes, and finds 12 with blemishes. The 95% confidence interval is (0.063, 0.204). What is the correct interpretation for this confidence interval?

The inspector can be 95% confident that the interval from 0.063 to 0.204 captures the proportion of all potatoes on the truck with blemishes

The scatterplot illustrates the relationship between distance and success rate of field-goal attempts for a sample of football kickers. Which of the following is an accurate description of the scatterplot?

The kickers have unusually low success rates when the distance is large. The kickers have unusually high success rates when the distance is small. As the distance of the attempt increases, the kickers have a lower success rate for their field goals. -As the distance of the attempt increases, the kickers tend to have a lower success rate for their field goals.

In an activity, students are pulling marbles from a large jar containing blue and red marbles. In their sample, students will calculate the proportion of red marbles. Which of the following is a correct statement about sampling variability?

The larger the sample size of marbles, the closer the sample proportion of red marbles will be to the true proportion of red marbles in the jar.

Recall information from the previous task. One study of 91 bald eagle eggs found that the eggs had a mean length of 73.6 millimeters and standard deviation of 2.9 millimeters. One bald eagle egg was 74.9 millimeters long. The z-score for this egg was 0.45. Which statements correctly interpret the z-score? Choose two correct answers.

The length of this egg was 0.45 standard deviations above the mean length. This egg was longer than the mean by 0.45 standard deviations, or 1.3 millimeters.

A new cream was developed to reduce the irritation caused by poison ivy. To test the effectiveness, researchers placed an ad online asking for volunteers to participate in the study. One hundred subjects replied and were informed that one group would receive the new cream and the other group would receive a cream with no active ingredient. All 100 subjects were exposed to poison ivy. Fifty were then randomly assigned to the group with the new cream, and 50 were randomly assigned to the group with the cream with no active ingredient. After three days, the subjects' level of irritation was measured. Which of the following accurately describes the benefit of comparison in the experiment?

The level of irritation for both groups can be compared to see if the new cream had a significant effect.

The table shows a set of conditional relative frequencies of drivers in a survey planning to buy a used vehicle next, based on how they obtained their current vehicle. Which interpretation of the relative frequencies given is the most appropriate?

The majority of drivers who will buy used next time bought their current vehicle used.

The table shows the marginal relative frequencies of surveyed drivers' plans for their next vehicle. Which statements appropriately interpret data from the table? Check all that apply.

The majority of drivers, about 62 percent, plan to buy a used vehicle next. Ten percent of drivers lease their current vehicle. The least percentage of people will lease their next car.

Ms. Willems surveyed her students about how long they studied for their last exam. The histogram shows her results. Which is the best description of the data in the histogram?

The majority of students studied between 4 and 8 hours.

The dotplot shows the scores of participants in a solo and ensemble music contest. Which statement best describes the measures of center?

The mean is less than the median.

The fuel economies in miles per gallon (mpg) for nine vehicles are listed below. 16, 18, 20, 24, 24, 24, 24, 31, 32 If one more vehicle is added to the list with a rate of 40 mpg, how will this affect the mean and median?

The mean will increase and the median will not change.

The scores for 21 students on an exam are summarized in the stemplot below. The teacher realizes that a mistake was made and the student whose score was recorded as 49% should have been 69%. If the mistake is corrected, what effect will this have on the mean and median scores?

The mean will increase but the median will be unchanged.

The team manager for a high school basketball team discarded a lower outlier and calculated that the mean number of points scored per game was 45 and the median was 48. What is the likely effect if the analyst decides to include the lower outlier in the calculations?

The median will remain about the same, but the mean will decrease.

An analyst for an online shopping site discarded an upper outlier and calculated that the mean number of minutes customers spent on the site was 23 and the median was 26. What effects are likely if the analyst decides to include the upper outlier in the calculations? Check all that apply.

The median will stay about the same. The mean will increase.

The following are the temperatures, in degrees Fahrenheit, of 20 US cities on April 3rd. The boxplot represents the data. 42, 47, 48, 50, 50, 50, 51, 51, 52, 52, 54, 55, 55, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 59, 60 Why is the boxplot incorrect?

The minimum temperature is 42ºF, but the boxplot shows 46ºF.

The scatterplot illustrates the relationship between two quantitative variables: the number of seeds planted per square foot and the yield of the crop (in pounds per square foot). Which of the following is an accurate description of the scatterplot?

The more seeds that are planted per square foot, the smaller the expected yield of the crop. The more seeds that are planted per square foot, the larger the expected yield of the crop. The expected yield of a crop is high whenever the number of seeds planted per square foot is small or large. A larger yield is expected when the number of seeds per square foot is around 60. -The expected yield of a crop is low whenever the number of seeds planted per square foot is small or large. A larger yield is expected when the number of seeds per square foot is around 60.

A university wants to survey students to gather opinions regarding a tuition increase for their online degree programs. A sample is collected by stationing employees at high traffic areas near the student center to administer the survey to passing students. Select the statement that best describes the result of the nonresponse bias.

The nonresponse bias will likely underestimate the approval percentage for the online tuition increase for the population.

Hannah has a chicken coop with 6 hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a randomly chosen day. The distribution for X is given in the table. Which is the correct interpretation of the standard deviation?

The number of eggs laid on a randomly selected day would typically vary from the expected number of eggs by 1.4 eggs.

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase and makes a probability distribution based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is given in the table. Which is the correct interpretation of the standard deviation?

The number of tickets purchased typically varies from the expected value by 0.95 tickets.

The graphs displays the movie preference of people by gender. Which statement best summarizes the data?

The percentage of males who prefer Movie B is greater than the percentage of males who prefer Movie C.

The data in the graph displays the season preference of people in relation to age. Which statement best summarizes the data?

The percentage of people who prefer spring is similar for the two age groups, but the percentages of people who prefer winter and fall differ between the age groups.

High school students were asked if they preferred fiction or nonfiction books. The results are displayed below. Which of the following statements is true, according to the graph?

The percentage of preference for each type of book is relatively equal among the different grades of students.

A credit card company is interested in the proportion of its customers who pay their minimum balance on time. The company randomly sampled 500 records from the previous month. The 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of customers who pay on time was (0.765, 0.835). What are the point estimate and the margin of error for this interval?

The point estimate is 0.80, the margin of error is 0.035.

A politician claims that a proposal for a new traffic law is broadly supported by both political parties and that a person from either political party is equally likely to support the proposed legislation. He cites two recent polls that said 70% of a random sample of 550 people from his political party supports the law, and 65% of a random sample of 420 people from the other political party supports the law. The 95 percent confidence interval for the difference in population proportions is (-0.010, 0.110). Based on the interval, is the politician's claim justified?

The politician's claim may be justified because the interval contains 0, which indicates no difference in the population proportions. However, because the interval also contains positive and negative values, it is also plausible that there is a difference in the proportions of party members who support the new traffic law.

A researcher for a polling organization used a random sample of 1,540 residents in a city to construct a 95 percent confidence interval for the proportion of voters who would vote for candidate Jones. The resulting confidence interval was 0.480 ± 0.025. What is the correct interpretation of the confidence interval?

The polling organization can be 95% confident that the interval from 0.455 to 0.505 captures the proportion of all city voters who would vote for Jones.

A company that manufactures car seats completes quality control tests per government regulations. The quality control department randomly selects 20% of the seats manufactured to evaluate safety conditions. Of those seats, 0.0005% indicated a safety problem. Which of the following describes the population and sample?

The population is 100% of the car seats and the sample is 20% of the car seats.

A researcher at Ohio State University is growing bacteria in her laboratory for a study. She extracts a group of 50 cells to observe under a microscope for cell structure. Which of the following describes the population and sample?

The population is all growing bacteria in the lab, and the sample is the group of 50 extracted cells.

A random sample of 40 seniors reveals that 10% of those sampled have assigned parking spaces in the high school's main lot. This is surprising because, according to the main office of the large high school, 45% of seniors have assigned parking spaces in the high school's main lot. Which of the following statements is true?

The population is all seniors and the sample is the 40 seniors who were randomly selected.

A student would like to estimate the mean length of words in a book report he just finished writing. He selects a random sample of 20 words and determines the mean length to be 4 characters. Later, he discovers how to use a built-in function of his word-processing program that reveals that the mean length of all words in his book report is 4.3 characters. Which of the following statements is true?

The population is all words in the book report and the sample is the random sample of 20 words.

Which statement(s) give advantages or disadvantages of systematic random sampling? Check all that apply.

The population size does not need to be known. Unknown patterns of differences in the population can be difficult to detect. Every member of a population does not need to be known.

A principal of a large high school wants to estimate the true proportion of high school students who use the community's public library. To do so, he selects a random sample of 50 students and asks them if they use the community's public library. The 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of all students who use the community's public library is 0.25 to 0.34. Which of these statements is a correct interpretation of the confidence level?

The principal can be 95% confident that the interval from 0.25 to 0.34 captures the true proportion of high school students who use the community's public library.

A local charity holds a carnival to raise money. In one activity, participants make a $3 donation for a chance to spin a wheel that has 10 spaces with the values, 0, 1, 2, 5, and 10. Whatever space it lands on, the participant wins that value. Let X represent the value of a random spin. The distribution is given in the table. Which of the following is the correct interpretation of P(X < 5)?

The probability of a random spin having a value lower than 5 is 0.8.

Standardized tests for certain subjects, given to high school students, are scored on a scale of 1 to 5. Let X represent the score on a randomly selected exam. The distribution of scores for one subject's standardized test is given in the table. Which of the following is the correct interpretation of P(X > 4)?

The probability of a randomly selected test having a score higher than 4 is 0.15.

A company that provides a free online language course wants to determine if learners would be willing to pay $12 per month for a premium version of the course. They ask the question, "Do you think $12 is too much too pay for a premium version of the course?" Select the statement that best describes the probable result of the question wording bias.

The question wording bias will likely underestimate the number of people willing to pay $12 per month for a premium version of the course.

Which of the following statements are always true about matched pairs experimental designs? Check all three that apply.

The randomization is carried out separately within each pair. Matched pairs design is a form of blocking, with each block containing two experimental units. The randomization within a matched pairs design can be accomplished with a coin toss.

The parallel dotplots below display the number of absences for students in each of two classes. Which of the following statements is true?

The range for the distribution of the number of absences is larger for class C.

A researcher takes a random sample of 2,496 drivers and finds that 1,603 put their phone in "drive mode" to not be distracted while driving. A 90% confidence interval for the proportion of drivers who use "drive mode" on their phones is (0.626, 0.658). Which statement correctly interprets the interval?

The researcher can be 90% confident that the interval from 0.626 to 0.658 captures the true proportion of all drivers who use "drive mode."

A restaurant wants to determine how much their customers like the dinner specials prepared by the new restaurant chef. A survey is administered by the waitstaff prior to the customer leaving the restaurant. Select the statement that best describes the probable result of the response bias.

The response bias will likely overestimate the likeability of the chef-prepared dinner specials.

A botanist wants to create an SRS of size 10 from 60 plants that are arranged in an array of 10 rows of 6 plants each. She numbers the plants in each row from one to six. For each of the 10 rows, she rolls a six-sided number cube and selects the plant corresponding to the number rolled. Which statements are true? Check all that apply.

The sample is a random sample. Each plant has an equal chance of being selected.

The manager of a machine shop wants to create an SRS of 20 parts to check for defects in the parts coming off an assembly line. She selects every other part that comes off the line until she has selected a total of 20 parts. Which statements are true? Check all that apply.

The sample is not a random sample. There are restrictions placed on the sample.

Ann selects a sample of 29 students at her large high school and finds that 12 of them are planning to travel outside of the state during the coming summer. She wants to construct a confidence interval for p = the proportion of all students at her school who plan on traveling outside of the state during the coming summer, but she realizes she hasn't met all the conditions for constructing the interval. Which condition for this procedure has she failed to meet?

The sample must be a random sample from the population.

A book publisher publishes both fiction and nonfiction books. Let F represent the number of words, per chapter, for fiction books, and let N represent the number of words, per chapter, for nonfiction books. The standard deviation of the total amount, S = F + N, is 195.3 words. What is the interpretation of this value?

This publisher can expect the total number of words per chapter to vary by approximately 195.3 words from the mean.

A news broadcast invites residents of a community to visit their website and vote for or against new legislation that will decrease benefits for the elderly.

The sampling method used by the news show is a convenience ✔ voluntary response sample. In this scenario, the effected demographic of elderly residents are equally ✔ lessX more likely to use technology to vote. As a result, the proportion of people who support decreased benefits will be correctly estimated ✔ overestimatedunderestimated for all residents of the community.

A school district sends an online survey to all parents of students in the district asking for feedback on proposed educational changes based on recent tax cuts.

The sampling method used by the school district is a convenience ✔ voluntary response sample. In this scenario, parents who feel strongly about the tax cuts are equally less ✔ more likely to respond. As a result, the negative feedback might be correctly estimated ✔ overestimatedunderestimated for all residents of the community.

A researcher wants to create an SRS of seven out of 85 subjects. She labels her subjects and then selects seven numbers by moving from left to right, across row 1 of the table. Use this table of random digits. Begin with row 1, column 1 and use two-digit number pairs. Her list of seven numbers is 69, 17, 80, 45, 21, 17, and 37. Which statement accurately describes the list of seven numbers?

The seven numbers were not chosen properly because the list includes repeats.

The weight (in pounds) and height (in inches) for a child were measured every few months over a two-year period. The results are given in the table. Using technology, what is the slope of the least-squares regression line and what is its interpretation?

The slope is 1.98, which means for each additional inch in height, the child's weight will increase by 1.98 pounds. The slope is 1.98, which means for each additional inch in height, the child's weight is predicted to increase by 1.98 pounds. The slope is 0.50, which means for each additional pound in weight, the child's height will increase by 0.5 inches. -The slope is 0.50, which means for each additional pound in weight, the child's height is predicted to increase by 0.5 inches.

A statistics student from a large high school takes a random sample of 200 students and finds that 123 are actively involved in a political party. A 99% confidence interval for the proportion of students at this school who are actively involved in a political party is (0.526, 0.704). Which statement correctly interprets the interval?

The statistics student can be 99% confident that the interval from 0.526 to 0.704 captures the true proportion of all students at this school who are actively involved in a political party.

A statistics class weighed 20 bags of grapes purchased from the store. The bags are advertised to contain 16 ounces, on average. The class calculated the 90% confidence interval for the true mean weight of bags of grapes from this store to be (15.875, 16.595) ounces. Is the store justified in stating that the average weight of the bags of grapes is 16 ounces?

The store may be justified in stating that the average weight of the bags is 16 ounces because 16 ounces is in the confidence interval.

A study is testing the effectiveness of a new headache medication. Sixty people who regularly suffer from headaches are assigned numbers from 01 to 60, and a table of random digits is used to select 30 subjects. The 30 selected subjects are given the medication, and the remaining 30 subjects are given placebo pills to take when they get a headache. The subjects who received the medication reported a strong improvement in symptoms, and the subjects who received the placebo reported a moderate improvement in symptoms. The subjects in the ✔ control groupX treatment group who received the X medication✔ placebo pill reported no improvementminimal improvement✔ moderate improvementX strong improvement in their headache symptoms during the experiment. This is a possible placebo effect.

The subjects in the ✔ control group ✔ placebo pill ✔ moderate improvement in their headache symptoms during the experiment. This is a possible placebo effect.

A math teacher is investigating the problem of students losing their graphing calculators because their names aren't written on them. In a random sample of 50 students, only 32 had their names written on their graphing calculators. The teacher constructs a 99% confidence interval for the proportion of all students at this school who have their names written on their graphing calculators and obtains (0.465, 0.815). What is the correct interpretation of this confidence interval?

The teacher can be 99% confident that the interval from 46.5% to 81.5% captures the true proportion of students who write their names on their graphing calculators.

A teacher wants to quantify how doing homework affects test scores. She has 60 statistics students. For the upcoming chapter she decides to randomly assign some students a daily homework assignment, which they will have to turn in for scoring. The other students will be told that they have no homework. Some of her students are advanced and others are on-level. She wants to conduct a randomized block design for this experiment. Which statements are true? Check all that apply.

The teacher should block by student ability level—advanced or on-level. The students should be given homework, or not be given homework, separately within each block. The size of each block depends on the number of advanced and on-level students.

A teacher has two large containers filled with blue, red, and green beads, and claims the proportions of red beads are the same in each container. Each student shakes the first container, selects 50 beads, counts the number of red beads, and returns the beads to the container. The student repeats this process for the second container. One student's samples contained 13 red beads from the first container and 16 red beads from the second container. Based on the 95% confidence interval, (-0.24, 0.11), is the teacher's claim justified?

The teacher's claim might not be justified because the interval contains both positive and negative values. It is plausible that the proportion of red beads in each container is different.

The scatterplot illustrates the relationship between two quantitative variables. Which of the following is an accurate description of the scatterplot?

This relationship contains two unusual points.

A physician is testing the effectiveness of two new exercise plans on 70 subjects. To assign the subjects to the two treatment groups, he writes "Plan 1" on one slip of paper and "Plan 2" on another slip of paper. He randomly picks one of the slips, and assigns the first 35 subjects who signed up to that plan, and assigns the last 35 subjects to the other plan. Select the statement that best describes the composition of the treatment groups.

The treatment groups might not be comparable, because the first 35 subjects to sign up for the study might share a characteristic related to exercise, such as high motivation.

A telemarketing company is conducting a study of new calling scripts. A group of 75 employees will be randomly assigned to three new scripts. The study designer numbers the subjects from 01 to 75, and uses a table of random digits to select 50 unique, two-digit numbers in the range 01-75. The 25 subjects corresponding to the first 25 random two-digit numbers will be assigned to script 1, the second 25 to script 2, and the 25 remaining subjects to script 3. Select the statement that best describes the composition of the treatment groups.

The treatment groups should be comparable, because characteristics of the subjects should be roughly equivalent among the three groups.

According to a recent random survey of 1,963 high school students, 581 report playing a musical instrument. A 90% confidence interval for the population of high school students who play a musical instrument is constructed. Which statement identifies what is being estimated?

The true proportion of high school students who play a musical instrument is p.

An employer wants to determine the amount of job satisfaction experienced by his employees. Employees are assigned to one of four pay scales. Each employee from the top two pay scales are chosen for the sample. Select the statement that best describes the result of the undercoverage bias.

The undercoverage bias will likely overestimate the inferred job satisfaction for the population.

A nutritionist collects data from 25 popular breakfast cereals. For each cereal, the number of calories per serving is plotted on the x-axis against the number of milligrams of sodium on the y-axis. The value of r for the resulting scatterplot is 0.83. How would the value of the correlation coefficient, r, change if sodium was plotted on the x-axis and calories plotted on the y-axis?

The value of r would increase. -The value of r would not change. The value of r would change to -0.83. The value of r could increase or decrease, depending of the strength of the new relationship.

The weight (in pounds) and height (in inches) for a child were measured every few months over a two-year period. The results are given in the table. Using technology, what is the y-intercept and what is its interpretation?

The y-intercept is 17.37. When the weight is 0 pounds, it does not make sense to interpret the height.

In a study of more than 3,200 divorced couples, researchers from a therapist's office found that those couples where both partners had divorced parents were more than three times as likely to divorce than couples where both partners did not have divorced parents. Does this scenario describe a retrospective or prospective observational study?

This scenario describes a ✔ retrospective observational study.

In a statistics class, a teacher had the students complete an activity in which they grabbed as many bite-sized pretzels as they could with their dominant hand, without crushing them. The teacher then measured their handspan in centimeters. The scatterplot displays the data the teacher collected along with the least-squares regression line. One student with a handspan of 23 cm grabbed 38 pretzels. This point is circled on the graph. What effect will the circled point have on the y-intercept?

The y-intercept will decrease because the point pulls the least-squares regression line toward it.

The manufacturer of an anti-nausea medication is testing a new chewable product against its existing non-chewable version. The 90 participants are assigned numbers from 01 to 90, and a table of random digits is used to select the 45 participants who receive the chewable version. The design web illustrates the experiment. Complete the statement below to describe how the experiment would benefit from blinding.

The ✔ test subject should not be informed about the different versions of the medication to reduce the influence of administrator bias✔ the placebo effect

A bakery is experimenting with a new preservative for its bread recipes to determine how it affects shelf life. For 150 loaves to be baked, they assign the numbers 001-150 and use a random number generator to select 50 loaves to be baked using three different amounts of the preservative.

There are 0.5✔ experimental units in each treatment group. There are ✔ 150 experimental units in all. The large number of loaves baked for each group ✔ will allow for good comparison of the differences in shelf life.

An insurance company is interested in comparing three options for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction to see if one option is better than the others. The participants are 60 people with an ACL tear. They are randomly divided into six groups. Each group receives one of the three options for ACL reconstruction (so that each treatment is given to two groups total). The functionality in leg motion of these 60 people is recorded and compared 12 weeks after surgery. Complete the sentences to accurately describe the situation.

There are ✔ three treatments, and they are the insurance company✔ options for ACL reconstruction in the study. The experimental units are the three options for ACL reconstruction✔ 60 people in the study study duration of 12 weeks. Since the experimental units ✔ are human beings, they are called ✔ subjects

A computer company wants to determine if the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production is more than 10%. A quality control specialist randomly selects 200 chips from a day's production and finds that 30 chips are defective. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, and , is 0.009. What is the correct interpretation of this value?

There is a 0.9% chance of getting a sample proportion of 0.15 or greater by chance alone if 0.10 is the true proportion.

When spinning a penny, Claire believes the proportion of times the penny lands on heads is higher than 0.5. She spins a penny 50 times and it lands on heads 32 times. The P-value for the test of the hypotheses, , What is the correct interpretation of this value?

There is a 2% chance of getting a sample proportion of 0.64 or greater by chance alone if 0.5 is the true proportion.

A health organization collects data on hospitals in a large metropolitan area. The scatterplot shows the relationship between two variables the organization collected: the number of beds each hospital has available and the average number of days a patient stays in the hospital (mean length of stay). Which of these statements best describes the relationship between the variables shown in the scatterplot?

There is a positive relationship between number of beds and lengths of stay.

The scatterplot shows survey results of 20 students about their number of siblings and recent test scores. Which statement is true about the relationship between number of siblings and test scores?

There is a strong, positive association between the number of siblings and test scores, but this does not imply causation.

A waitress wondered if there was an association between the type of food and the type of drink customers ordered. The results are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between food ordered and drink ordered?

There is an association because the distribution of drinks ordered differs among the food groups.

A local school board claims that there is a difference in the proportions of households with school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier, and the proportion of households without school-aged children that would support starting the school year a week earlier. They survey a random sample of 40 households with school-aged children about whether they would support starting the school year a week earlier, and 30 households respond yes. They survey a random sample of 45 households that do not have school-aged children, and 25 respond yes. Based on the 90% confidence interval, (0.03, 0.36), is there convincing evidence of a difference in the true proportions of households, those with school-aged children and those without school-aged children, who would support starting school early?

There is convincing evidence because the entire interval is above 0.

The nutrition supervisor for a school district is considering adding a baked potato bar to the lunch for all the high school cafeterias. He wants to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of students who would purchase from the potato bar for two high schools, East and West. The cafeteria manager at each high school randomly surveys 90 students. At East High School, 63 of the students said they would purchase the potato bar on that day. At West High School, 45 students said they would. Based on the 99% confidence interval, (0.02, 0.38), is there convincing evidence of a difference in the proportions of students who would purchase from the potato bar between East and West High Schools?

There is convincing evidence because the entire interval is above 0.

A computer company wants to determine if there is difference in the proportions of defective computer chips in a day's production from two different production plants, A and B. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 100 chips from the day's production from plant A, and determines that there are 12 defective chips. The specialist then takes a random sample of 100 chips from the day's production from plant B, and determines that there are 10 defective chips. Based on the 90% confidence interval, (-0.05, 0.09), is there convincing evidence of a difference in the true proportions of defective chips from a day's production between the two plants?

There is not convincing evidence because the interval contains 0.

In a statistics activity, students are asked to determine if there is a difference in the proportion of times that a spinning penny will land with tails up, and the proportion of times a spinning dime will land tails up. The students are instructed to spin the penny and the dime 30 times and record the number of times they land tails up. For one student, the penny lands tails side up 18 times, and the dime lands tails side up 20 times. Based on the 98% confidence interval, (-0.36, 0.22), is there evidence of a difference in proportions of tails side up for a penny and a dime?

There is not convincing evidence because the interval contains 0.

An indoor running track is 200 meters in length. During a 3,000-meter race, runners must complete 15 laps of the track. An electronic timing device records the time it takes each runner to complete a lap for every lap in the race. These are called lap times. The histogram below displays the lap times for Stefano, a runner in the 3,000-meter race. Which of the following is a true statement based on the histogram?

There were no lap times between 35 and 36 seconds.

A nutritionist would like to estimate the number of times adults exercise each week. To collect information, the nutritionist emails the members of the local fitness center. Which of the following describes the bias that may arise from the results?

This is a voluntary response sample and likely overestimates the frequency of exercise.

A guidance counselor wants to determine if there is a relationship between a student's number of absences, x, and their grade point average (GPA), y. The data that were collected are displayed in the scatterplot and the least-squares regression line was calculated. One student with 2 absences has a GPA of 1.8. This point is circled on the graph. What effect does the circled point have on the slope and y-intercept of the least-squares regression line?

This point will increase the value of the slope and increase the value of the y-intercept. This point will increase the value of the slope and decrease the value of the y-intercept. -This point will decrease the value of the slope and increase the value of the y-intercept. This point will decrease the value of the slope and decrease the value of the y-intercept.

A veterinarian selected a random sample of 10 dogs to study their sleep patterns. Five of the dogs were randomly assigned to eat dry dog food and the other five dogs were randomly assigned to eat wet dog food. The data showed that dogs who ate wet dog food were more likely to sleep regularly than those who ate dry dog food. Does this scenario describe an observational study or an experiment?

This scenario describes an ✔ experiment.

In the decathlon event at large track meets, male athletes compete in a total of 10 events. Their combined performance in each of the events is used to determine the winner. Two of the events are the 200-meter dash and the javelin throw. For 12 athletes at a large international competition, performances in these two events are recorded and placed in a scatterplot. The value of r for this scatterplot is 0.369. Which of the following best describes the relationship between the variables in the scatterplot?

Those with higher 200-meter times tend to have longer javelin distances. The relationship is moderate.

A researcher wants to generate an SRS to study the blood pressures of a population of 100 athletes on four high school athletic teams. Use the drop-down menus to complete each statement.

To be considered an SRS, the athletes in the sample of size n must have the same chance of being selected from the population as X a group of n athletes from each team✔ every other group of athletes of size nX a group of size n with different blood pressures. To be considered an SRS, the sample ✔ cannot be biasedcan be biased may or may not be biased.

A random sample of teenagers were surveyed about their favorite sport. The bar graph below displays their responses. Which of the following statements is correct?

Twice as many teenagers in the sample chose soccer over basketball as their favorite sport.

A professional tennis player has a serve-return rate of p = 0.71. A random sample of 55 serve returns is selected. Which of the following is the mean of the sampling distribution of P?

Up=p=0.71

A therapist wants to study the effects of yoga and meditation on stress relief. She has 60 volunteers who experience varying levels of stress. Half of the participants will be assigned to practice yoga for one month and the other half will practice meditation. Before the experiment begins, all of the participants will be asked to rate their stress levels on a scale from 0 to 10, with 0 representing "no stress" and 10 representing "highest level of stress." At the end of one month, the participants will be asked to rate their stress levels again. The differences in stress levels will be compared. Which of the following describes a matched pairs design?

Volunteers are put together in groups of two based on stress level. For each group of two, a coin is flipped. If it lands on heads, then the first person is placed in the yoga group and if it is tails, then the first person is placed in the meditation group. The other person will be placed in the other group. After one month, the stress levels between the two participants are measured and compared.

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the price of bobbleheads and the demand of bobbleheads. Information was collected from a survey and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = -0.227x +50.455, where x represents the price of a bobblehead (measured in dollars) and ŷ is the predicted demand of bobbleheads (in units). Which statement best describes the meaning of the y-intercept of the regression line?

When the price of a bobblehead is $0, the predicted demand is 50.455 units. This interpretation is not meaningful because a bobblehead cannot have a price of $0.

Market researchers were interested in the relationship between the number of pieces in a brick-building set and the cost of a set. Information was collected from a survey and was used to obtain the regression equation ŷ = 0.08x +1.20, where x represents the number of pieces in a set and ŷ is the predicted price (in dollars) of a set. Which statement best describes the meaning of the y-intercept of the regression line?

When the price of a set is $0, the predicted number of pieces is 0. When the price of a set is $0, the predicted number of pieces is 1.20. -When the number of pieces is 0, the predicted price is $1.20. This interpretation is not meaningful because a set cannot have 0 pieces. When the number of pieces is 0, the predicted price is $0.08. This interpretation is not meaningful because a set cannot have 0 pieces.

A beauty product company conducts a study to test the effectiveness of a new shampoo to control split ends. One hundred subjects have volunteered to take part in the study and will be divided into a treatment group and a placebo group. The study leader will assign the subjects to the groups randomly using slips of paper. Select each statement that could describe an appropriate step in the labeling process.

Write "treatment group" on 50 slips of paper and write "placebo group" on 50 slips of paper. Number the subjects from 1 to 100, and write the numbers 1 to 100 on the slips of paper. Write the name of each subject on a slip of paper.

A fair, six-sided number cube has the numbers 2, 2, 4, 4, 6, 6 on its faces. Sarah rolls this number cube 10 times and records the number of times a 2 is rolled. Have the conditions for a binomial setting been met for this scenario?

Yes, all four conditions in BINS have been met.

Packets of celery seeds contain exactly 10 seeds. Each seed has a probability of 0.85 of growing to maturity if properly planted. The success of one seed does not affect the success of any other seed. Let X represent the number of seeds that grow to maturity. Have the conditions for a binomial setting been met for this scenario?

Yes, all four conditions in BINS have been met.

There are 10 multiple-choice questions on a math quiz. Each question has four answer choices with one correct answer. Let X represent the number of questions answered correctly for a student who is randomly guessing each answer choice. Have the conditions for a binomial setting been met for this scenario?

Yes, all four conditions in BINS have been met.

The segmented bar graph below displays the distribution of pet ownership among homeowners and renters. Is pet ownership associated with housing arrangement?

Yes, because the distribution of pet ownership differs among homeowners and renters.

A producer of 10-ounce bags of pretzels claims that less than 7% of the pretzels in each bag are broken. The 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of broken pretzels in the 10-ounce bags produced by this company is (0.036, 0.067). Is it reasonable to conclude that less than 7% of pretzels in each bag are broken?

Yes, because the entire interval is less than 0.07.

A teacher assigns 10 questions for homework and wants to randomly pick 3 questions to be graded. He writes the numbers 1-10 on equally sized slips of paper and places them in a bag. He shakes the bag and selects 3 slips of paper. Is the sample of 3 questions a simple random sample?

Yes, because the paper slips were equally sized and the bag was shaken.

A florist wants to determine if a new additive helps extend the life of cut flowers longer than the original additive does. The florist selects 20 flowers of different types and puts each flower in its own vase with the same amount of water. She positions the vases so they also receive the same exposure to light. She numbers the flowers 1-20, and places these numbers on equal-sized slips of paper. The slips are placed in a hat and mixed thoroughly. A slip is chosen and the corresponding flower receives the new additive. After the hat is shaken, another slip is chosen and the corresponding flower also receives the new additive. This procedure continues until 10 flowers have been assigned to receive the new additive. The remaining 10 flowers receive the original additive. Is this a randomized block design for this experiment?

Yes, each flower is randomly assigned to the treatments. Yes, the flowers were placed in their own vases, and received the same amount of water and light. No, only 20 flowers were used in the experiment. -No, the flowers were not put into groups first and then randomly assigned the two additives.

The parallel boxplots below display the quiz grades (out of 30) for two of Mrs. Smith's statistics classes. Which statement best compares the variability of the quiz scores for the two classes? The quiz grades for class 1 have more variability than the quiz grades for class 2. The quiz grades for class 1 have less variability than the quiz grades for class 2. The quiz grades for class 1 are not as spread out as the quiz grades for class 2. The quiz grades for class 1 are higher, on average, than the quiz grades for class 2.

a

A concerned mother wants to ensure that her children are drinking pure water. Specifically, she wants to compare the water quality that comes from her kitchen sink to that which runs through her stand-alone water-filtration system. She purchases a device that measures the contamination of the water on a scale of 0-100, where 0 indicates no contaminants and 100 means the water is fully contaminated and unsuitable for human consumption. She selects 30 samples of water from her kitchen sink. She randomly selects 15 of the samples to run through the water-filtration system. Afterward, she measures the contamination of all 30 samples of water, cleaning the device between each measurement. She computes the average contamination score for the 15 samples of water that came directly from her sink, as well as the average contamination score for the 15 samples of water that came through the filtration system. Is this a completely randomized design? Explain.

Yes, she assigned the samples of water to the treatments completely at random.

A farmer determines that, on average, his chickens lay a total of 16 eggs each day. A random sample of 10 days was taken, and the mean number of eggs was 15.1 eggs. Let μ = the true mean number of eggs the chickens lay each day. Under the assumption that the true mean number of eggs is 16, 100 simulated means for samples of size 10 are shown in the dotplot. Using the dotplot, is there evidence that the chickens are laying fewer than 16 eggs?

Yes, since a sample mean number of eggs of 15.1 eggs or less only occurred twice in simulated values, there is evidence that the true mean number of eggs is less than 16.

A bottled water company bottles varying sizes of water, from 8-ounce to 1-gallon containers. The company has determined that the mean quantity in their 20-ounce bottles is 20.8 ounces with a standard deviation of 0.6 ounces. The bottling plant manager believes his machines are overfilling the bottles. A random sample of 30 bottles is taken, and the mean number of ounces of water is determined to be 20.9. Under the assumption that the true mean ounces of water is 20.8, 100 simulated means for samples of size 30 are shown in the dotplot. Using the dotplot, is there evidence that machines are overfilling the 20-ounce bottles?

Yes, since a sample mean of 20.9 is greater than the mean, 20.8, there is evidence that the true mean ounces of water is greater than 20.8.

The owner of an apple orchard knows that the average weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams. A random sample of 40 apples was selected, and the mean weight was 390 grams. Let μ = the true mean weight of the Granny Smith apples in the orchard. Under the assumption that the true mean weight of Granny Smith apples is 380 grams, 100 simulated means for samples of size 40 are shown in the dotplot. Using the dotplot, is there evidence that the true mean weight of Granny Smith apples is greater than 380 grams?

Yes, since a sample mean weight of 390 grams or more only occurred once in 100 simulated values, there is evidence that the true mean weight is greater than 380 grams.

The distribution of tips given by customers who buy one cup of coffee is bimodal with a mean of $0.29 and a standard deviation of $0.1164. If a random sample of 50 tips from customers who buy one cup of coffee is selected, is it appropriate to calculate the probability of a sample mean being more than $0.32 using an approximately Normal model?

Yes, since the sample size 50 is large enough, the sampling distribution for would be approximately Normal, and P(> 32) = 0.3983.

A computer company wants to determine the proportion of defective computer chips from a day's production. A quality control specialist takes a random sample of 100 chips from the day's production and determines that there were 12 defective chips. He wants to construct a 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of defective chips from the day's production. Are the conditions for inference met?

Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

A therapist wanted to determine if yoga or meditation is better for relieving stress. The therapist recruited 100 of her high-stress patients. Fifty of them were randomly assigned to take weekly yoga classes and the other 50 were assigned weekly meditation classes. After one month, 30 of the 50 patients in the yoga group reported less stress, and 35 of the 50 patients in the meditation group reported less stress. The therapist wants to construct a 95% confidence interval for the difference in proportions of patients experiencing stress relief after yoga and after meditation. Are the conditions for inference met?

Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

The owner of a popular coffee shop wants to determine if there is a difference between the proportion of customers who use their own cups when they purchase a coffee beverage, and the proportion of customers who use their own cups when they purchase an espresso beverage. Customers using their own cups get a 5% discount, which is displayed on the receipt. The owner randomly selects 50 receipts from all coffee purchases and 50 receipts from all espresso purchases. For coffee purchases, 24 receipts showed that the customer used their own cup. For espresso purchases, 18 receipts showed the customer used their own cup. The owner wants to construct a 95% confidence interval for the difference in the proportions of customers who use their own cups. Are the conditions for inference met?

Yes, the conditions for inference are met.

An outboard motor on a boat has a cord to pull to start it. Advertisements boast that the motor "Starts on the first pull, every time!" In reality, the motor has a 95% chance of starting on each pull. A customer wants to know how many times he will have to pull the cord to start the motor. Is it appropriate to use the geometric distribution to calculate probabilities in this situation?

Yes, the geometric distribution is appropriate.

The ages of the 5 officers for a school club are 18, 18, 17, 16, and 15. The mean of the ages of the officers is 16.8. The table displays all possible samples of size 2 and the corresponding mean for each sample. Using the means in the table, is the sample mean an unbiased estimator?

Yes, the mean of the sample means is 16.8, which is the same as the mean age of the officers.

The ages of the 5 officers for a school club are 18, 18, 17, 16, and 15. The proportion of officers who are younger than 18 is 0.6. The table displays all possible samples of size 2 and the corresponding proportion for each sample. Using the proportions in the table, is the sample proportion an unbiased estimator?

Yes, the mean of the sample proportions is 0.6, which is the same as the population proportion.

The pie chart below indicates the eye colors of 30 students in a statistics class. Which of the following bar graphs could be equivalent to the pie chart?

a

A producer of gel pens claims that 96% of its pens can write more than 10,000 words without losing ink. A random sample of 500 pens is collected, and it is found that 470 of the pens can write more than 10,000 words without losing ink. Let p= the proportion of the sample of pens that can write more than 10,000 words. The probability that 94% or fewer of these gel pens can write more than 10,000 words is 0.0115. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the producer of the gel pens?

Yes, the probability of seeing the sample result is so far from what is expected that the probability of it occurring by chance alone is very unlikely (0.0115 < 0.05).

An acting school claims that 71% of its graduates land major acting roles within one year of graduation. A random sample of 50 graduates was surveyed, and 30 of them had landed major roles within one year of graduation. Let = the proportion of the sample who had landed major roles within one year of graduation. The probability that 60% or fewer graduates land a major acting role within one year of graduating from this school is 0.043. Does this result provide convincing evidence against the school's claim?

Yes, the probability of seeing the sample result is so far from what is expected that the probability of it occurring by chance alone is very unlikely (0.043 < 0.05).

In a large ball pit, 20% of the balls are red. You plan to jump in and randomly select 10 balls. Which statement is true?

You will likely have one to three red balls in your sample.

A basketball player averages 22.5 points scored per game with a standard deviation of 6.2 points. In one game, the athlete scored 10 points. What is the z-score for the points scored in this game? -2.02 -1.63 1.63 2.02

a

A runner's distribution of times for running 1,000 meters has a mean of 4.5 minutes with a standard deviation of 0.75 minutes. One of the runner's times has a z-score of -1.76. What is the runner's time? 3.18 minutes 3.75 minutes 5.25 minutes 5.82 minutes

a

Currently, professional men's basketball players score an average of 18.2 points per game with a standard deviation of 4.5 points. The current top-scoring professional basketball player scores an average of 36.2 points per game. In one season in the 1990s, professional basketball players averaged 13.2 points per game with a standard deviation of 3.7 points. The top-scoring professional basketball player averaged 30.1 points per game. Which player did better relative to his peers? The 1990s basketball player did better than the current basketball player because his z-score is higher. The current basketball player did better than the 1990s basketball player because his z-score is higher. The 1990s basketball player did better than the current basketball player because his z-score is closer to the mean. The current basketball player did better than the 1990s basketball player because his z-score is closer to the mean.

a

Customers in a coffee shop were asked if they prefer caffeinated or decaffeinated coffee and if they prefer their coffee with or without milk. The results are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between the type of coffee and milk preference? There is an association because the distribution of milk preference differs among the types of coffee. There is an association because the distribution of milk preference is the same among the types of coffee. There is no association because the distribution of milk preference differs among the types of coffee. There is no association because the distribution of milk preference is the same among the types of coffee.

a

Passengers traveling by airplane have two options for their bags: carry-on (for smaller bags) or check (for large bags). An airline examines the baggage choices of its customers on a selection of short flights (less than 500 miles) and long flights (more than 500 miles). What is the probability that a customer is on a short flight and checked their bag? 15.1% 31.1% 36.4% 48.8%

a

People of different ages were asked the question "Do you listen to audiobooks?" The bar chart displays the percentage of "yes" responses in each age group. Would it be appropriate to display the data with a pie chart? No, because the proportions are not parts of a whole. No, because the data categories are too broad. Yes, because the data are grouped into categories. Yes, because the data can be represented by a relative frequency compared to the whole.

a

Some students were surveyed about their eye color and their favorite color. The results are displayed below. Which of the following statements is true, based on the graph? The distribution of favorite color is the same for each eye-color group. The group that had the highest percentage of those who like blue is the brown eye group. The group that had the highest percentage of those who like red is in the hazel eye group. The group that had the lowest percentage of those who like orange is the green eye group.

a

The bars in this graph represent the favorite sport listed by teenagers in a random sample. Is this graph misleading? Yes, because the scale does not start at 0. Yes, because the bars are not the same height. No, because the bars are all the same width. No, because the scale starts at 0.

a

The dotplots below display the number of bite-size snacks that students in two statistic classes grabbed with one hand. Class A has 32 students and Class B has 34 students. Which statement best compares the variability of the number of snacks grabbed for Class A and Class B? The number of snacks grabbed for Class A has less variability than the number of snacks grabbed for Class B. The number of snacks grabbed for Class B has less variability than the number of snacks grabbed for Class A. The number of snacks grabbed for Class A has more variability than the number of snacks grabbed for Class B. The number of snacks grabbed for Class B has about the same variability as the number of snacks grabbed for Class A.

a

The parallel boxplots below display the bag weights of two different brands, A and B, of granola. Which brand of granola typically weighs more? Brand A bags typically weigh more because the median of brand A is higher than that of brand B. Brand B bags typically weigh more than brand A bags because there is a high outlier at 52.5. Brand A bags typically weigh more than brand B bags because there are no outliers in the distribution. Brand B bags typically weigh more because the range of weights is higher than that of brand A.

a

The pie chart below indicates the eye colors of students in a statistics class. Which of the following is not a correct statement about the pie chart? More students have hazel eyes than blue. Most of the students in the class have brown eyes. More students in the class have blue eyes than hazel. The fewest number of students have gray eyes.

a

The scores for 21 students on an exam are summarized in the stemplot below. The teacher realizes that a mistake was made and the student whose score was recorded as 49% should have been 94%. If the mistake is corrected, what effect will this have on the mean and median scores? The mean and median will both increase. Neither the mean nor the median will change. The mean will increase but the median will decrease. The mean will increase but the median will be unchanged.

a

The stemplot below represents the number of bite-size snacks grabbed by 32 students in an activity for a statistics class. What percentage of the number of snacks grabbed is greater than 29? 16% 25% 75% 84%

a

The weekly sales results of three sales teams are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between team sales and the day of the week? There is an association because the distribution of team sales differs among the days of the week. There is an association because the distribution of team sales is the same among the days of the week. There is no association because the distribution of team sales differs among the days of the week. There is no association because the distribution of team sales is the same among the days of the week.

a

Vehicles passing over a bridge have two options for paying their bridge toll: paying with a live cashier or using a Speed Pass device affixed to the dashboard. Data on a busy day for cars and trucks passing over the bridge are shown here. What proportion of vehicles crossing the bridge are trucks and use Speed Pass? 0.2814 0.4123 0.6826 0.7231

a

test statistic(z)

a standardized scare of the μ

A student would like to estimate the average number of text messages sent by cell-phone users in a day. Which of the following methods would provide a voluntary response sample?

a text poll provided during a nightly news broadcast

A survey about rideshare services includes the following questions: Which rideshare services have you used in the past two months? Which rideshare service is your favorite? What is your age? How many miles did you travel? Which are the variables in the study? Check all that apply.

age favorite rideshare service miles traveled by rideshare service types of rideshare services

Researchers would like to assess the overall health of white pine trees in a state park. Using a computer program, the researchers selected 100 random points in the state park and assessed the trees closest to the selected points. Of the 100 trees selected, 24 showed damage to their lower limbs. Which of the following describes the population in this setting?

all white pine trees in the state park

The graph displays the vacation preferences of people in relation to their states of residency. Use the drop-down menu to complete the statement based on the bar graph show - vacations have approximately the same proportion among all four states.

amusement park

The proportion of twins born in a town is p = 0.12. Suppose we randomly select 100 women from this town who give birth in the next year. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of P?

ap=0.032 In SRSs of size 100, the sample proportion of women in this town giving birth to twins typically varies 0.032 from the true proportion, p = 0.12.

A professional tennis player has a serve-return rate of p = 0.71. A random sample of 55 serve returns is selected. Which of the following is the correct calculation and interpretation of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of p?

ap=0.061 In SRSs of size 55, the sample proportion of this tennis player's serve-return rate typically varies 0.061 from the true proportion p = 0.71.

The number of marshmallows an adult can fit in their mouth is skewed right with a mean of 6.5 and a standard deviation of 0.58. What is the probability that a random sample of 40 adults would have a mean of at least 7 marshmallows?

approximately 0

The weights of gala apples follow a Normal distribution with a mean of 140 grams and a standard deviation of 12 grams. The owner of an apple orchard randomly selects 5 apples from the harvest and records the mean weight. What is the shape of the distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 5 from this population?

approximately Normal

Which of the following statements is true about the IQR, range, and standard deviation? The IQR is the least resistant to extreme values. The IQR is the most resistant to extreme values. The range is the most resistant to extreme values. The standard deviation is the most resistant to extreme values.

b

Movie critics claim that 68% of adults and 79% of teenagers would recommend seeing the newest action movie. Suppose random samples of 43 adults and 52 teenagers are selected. Let and be the sample proportions of adult and teenage moviegoers, respectively, who would recommend this movie. Which of the following is the correct shape and justification of the sampling distribution of PA-PT?

approximately Normal because the expected numbers of successes and failures for each sample are all at least 10

The salaries of professional baseball players are heavily skewed right with a mean of $3.2 million and a standard deviation of $2 million. The salaries of professional football players are also heavily skewed right with a mean of $1.9 million and a standard deviation of $1.5 million. A random sample of 40 baseball players' salaries and 35 football players' salaries is selected. The mean salary is determined for both samples. Let represent the difference in the mean salaries for baseball and football players. Which of the following represents the shape of the sampling distribution for ?

approximately Normal since both sample sizes are greater than 30

The salaries of professional baseball players are heavily skewed right with a mean of $3.2 million and a standard deviation of $2 million. A baseball analyst randomly selects 40 athletes and records the mean salary. What is the shape of the distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 40 from this population?

approximately normal

A clothing store manager notices that when any one customer comes into the store, there is a 52% chance they will make a purchase. She also notices that one customer's decision to make a purchase is independent of other customers' decisions. Suppose one Friday, 75 customers come into this store. Let X represent the number of customers who make a purchase. What is the shape of the probability histogram of X?

approximately symmetric

A basketball player averages 22.5 points scored per game with a standard deviation of 6.2 points. In one game, the number of points the athlete scored was 1.2 standard deviations below the mean. Which of the following is the z-score for the number of points scored? -7.4 -1.2 1.2 7.4

b

A college student would like to investigate the prices of sandwiches offered near the campus. A sample of 50 shops that sell sandwiches near the campus was taken and the price they charge for a large sandwich was recorded. The results are displayed in the cumulative relative frequency histogram below. Which interval contains the median sandwich price? $9-$10 $10-$11 $11-$12 $12-$13

b

A college student would like to investigate the prices of sandwiches offered near the campus. A sample of 50 shops that sell sandwiches near the campus was taken and the price they charge for a large sandwich was recorded. The results are displayed in the cumulative relative frequency histogram below. Which is a correct statement regarding sandwich prices, based on the histogram? The distribution of sandwich prices is skewed left. The interval from $9 to $10 contains the largest number of sandwich prices. About 62 percent of sandwich shops sell their large sandwich for between $10 and $11. More sandwich shops sell a large sandwich for $12 to $13 dollars than for $10 to $11.

b

A random sample of teenagers were surveyed and asked about their favorite sport. The pie chart below displays their responses. Which of the following could be the percentage for volleyball? 5% 13% 25% 50%

b

A sample of 10 packs of a brand of chewing gum was taken. Each pack was weighed and their weights, in grams, are shown. 43.0, 43.7, 49.6, 46.9, 47.6, 45.4, 51.2, 48.0, 40.5, 49.1 What is the z-score for the pack of gum weighing 43 grams? -1.13 -1.05 1.05 1.13

b

A sample of 50 students was surveyed about their time spent in front of a screen (laptop, tablet, phone, etc.). Each interval contains the left endpoint but not the right endpoint. In which interval is the median? [4,5) [5,6) [6,7) [7,8)

b

An indoor running track is 200 meters in length. During a 3,000-meter race, runners must complete 15 laps of the track. An electronic timing device records the amount of time it takes each runner to complete a lap for every lap in the race. These are called lap times. The histograms below display the lap times for both Stefano and Alex, runners in the 3,000-meter race. Using the histograms, which of the following is a correct comparison? Neither runner had a lap time between 35 and 36 seconds. Alex's lap times show less variability than Stefano's lap times. The median lap time for both runners is in the 38-39 interval. Both runners' highest number of lap times in the 37-38 interval.

b

An urban planner collects data on how park trails are used by residents. The planner looks at two trails: one that winds through an urban area and another in a suburban park. The table shows the number of users who walk, jog, or bike the trail. What proportion of park users jog on the park trail? 0.1625 0.3350 0.4328 0.5672

b

Claire wants to determine how her math score, 690, on a standardized college entrance exam compares to her mother's score, 680, when she took the exam 20 years earlier. The year Claire took the exam, the mean math score was 510 with a standard deviation of 110 points. When Claire's mother took the exam, the mean math score was 490 with a standard deviation of 100 points. Who had the better relative performance? Claire did better because her z-score is greater than her mother's. Claire's mother did better because her z-score is greater than Claire's. Claire did better because her z-score is closer to the mean than her mother's. Claire's mother did better because her z-score is closer to the mean than Claire's.

b

what happens to the sampling distribution of p̂ when n increases?

becomes approx Normal

In the 2018 baseball season, the Detroit Tigers scored 3.89 runs per game and had a z-score of -1.3. In the 2017-2018 hockey season, the Detroit Red Wings scored 5.76 goals per game and had a z-score of -0.62. Which team had a stronger performance?

below smaller below red wings tigers

Does eating a mint affect a person's taste buds? To answer this question, students were randomly placed into two groups. One group had to eat a mint, and the other did not. Then all the students were given a cup that had one of two brands of ice tea. Students were asked to guess which brand of ice tea they had. The results are displayed below. Which of the following statements is true, according to the graph? Students who ate a mint were more accurate guessers. Students who did not eat a mint were more accurate guessers. Students who did not eat a mint made more incorrect guesses. Eating a mint did not have an effect on a student's ability to guess the ice tea.

b

Drivers pay a toll to pass over a busy bridge, and there are many toll booths that collect money. The city manager counted the total number of cars waiting to pay their tolls at 15-minute intervals during the day for a total of 50 observations. The histogram below shows the results. Which interval contains the median number of cars in line? 10-20 cars 20-30 cars 30-40 cars 40-50 cars

b

Drivers pay a toll to pass over a busy bridge, and there are many toll booths that collect money. The city manager counted the total number of cars waiting to pay their tolls at 15-minute intervals during two different days, once on a weekday and once on a weekend. The histograms below show the results. Using the histograms, which of the following is the correct comparison of the distributions? The 10-20 interval contains the most observations on both days. The two distributions for number of cars in line are both skewed right. The median number of cars for both distributions lies in the 20-30 interval. There were more than 40 cars in line more often on the weekend than the weekday.

b

IQ scores are collected from a sample of 36 students at a large university. The scores are summarized in the histogram below. Which of the following statements is true of the mean and median? The mean is equal to the median IQ. The mean is less than the median IQ. The mean is greater than the median IQ. It cannot be determined because we cannot tell the exact values of the IQ scores in the sample.

b

In some gymnastics meets, the score given to a gymnast is the mean of the judges' scores after the highest and lowest scores have been tossed out. Nikita's scores on the floor routine from all of the judges are shown below. 7.50, 7.50, 7.75, 7.75, 8.00, 8.00, 8.00, 10.00 How does Nikita's mean score before removing the highest and lowest scores compare to her mean score after the highest and lowest scores are removed? Her score does not change. Her score is lower after removing the highest and lowest scores. Her score is higher after removing the highest and lowest scores. There is not enough information to determine if her score increases or decreases.

b

On a unit test in a statistics class, the teacher determines that the mean test grade was 77.5 with a standard deviation of 5.2. One test grade has a z-score of 2.4. Which of the following statements gives the best interpretation of this z-score? This student's test grade was higher than 2.4% of the other students' test grades. This student's test grade was 2.4 standard deviations above the mean test grade. This student's test grade was 2.4 standard deviations below the mean test grade. The student's test grade was lower than 2.4% of the other students' test grades.

b

Residents in a city are charged for water usage every three months. The water bill is computed from a common fee, along with the amount of water the customers use. The last water bills for 40 residents from two different neighborhoods are displayed in the histograms. Which statement correctly compares the water bills for the two neighborhoods? Overall, water bills on Pine Road are less than those on Front Street. Overall, water bills on Pine Road are higher than those on Front Street. The range of water bills on Pine Road is lower than the range of water bills on Front Street. The range of water bills on Pine Road is higher than the range of water bills on Front Street.

b

Some teenagers collected trash for a beach clean-up. The data for the number of pounds of trash collected by each teenager are shown below. 26, 26, 21, 22, 20, 25, 35 What is the IQR of the data? 1 pounds 5 pounds 5.033 pounds 15 pounds

b

Students apply for admission to different academic programs within a college. Because of space, each program can only accept a limited number of students. The table below shows the acceptance data for a selection of majors in the college. For the majors listed here, what proportion of students were rejected?

b

The arm spans were measured, in centimeters, for 12 students. The results are shown below. 148, 151, 154, 155, 160, 161, 162, 162, 167, 170, 171, 180 A student used the data to create this stemplot. Does this stemplot accurately display the data? No, the stems should not be split. Yes, this is an accurate display of the data. No, there should be another stem of 17. No, there should be another stem of 17 and another stem of 18.

b

The graph below displays a fire department's response time, which measures the time from when the alarm is sounded at the firehouse to the time the first fire engine leaves the station. Which interval contains the median response time? 40-50 seconds 50-60 seconds 60-70 seconds 70-80 seconds

b

The heights of a sample of 15 students are recorded in the stemplot below. What is the mean height, in inches, of this sample? 65 65.2 66 67

b

The stemplot below displays the arm spans, in centimeters, for 44 students. What percentage of students has an arm span of at least 170 cm? 41% 45% 55% 59%

b

The weekly sales results of three sales teams are displayed below. Which of the following statements is not true, according to the graph? Team A has its highest sales toward the end of the week. Team B has its highest sales toward the end of the week. Team A has its lowest sales toward the beginning of the week. Team C has its highest sales toward the beginning of the week.

b

Thirty-four high school students were surveyed and asked how many siblings they have. The dotplot below displays the distribution of responses. What percent of students have fewer than 2 siblings? 9% 24% 26% 50%

b

Twelve people were surveyed and asked how many people live in their residence. The results are summarized in the table below. What is the median number of people per residence? Round to one decimal place if needed. The median is 2 people per residence. The median is 2.5 people per residence. The median is 2.8 people per residence. The median is 3.5 people per residence.

b

The table shows how surveyed drivers obtained their current vehicle and how they plan to get their next vehicle. Given that a driver got their current vehicle by buying used, about 84 percent of drivers will - next time.

buy used

A box of LED light bulbs was tested to see how long the light bulbs last. The standard deviation of the light bulb lifetime data was five years. Which of the following is the best interpretation of this value? Fifty percent of the light bulb lifetime data is below five years. The difference between the longest and shortest light bulb lifetime was five years. The lifetime of the light bulbs typically varies by about five years from the mean. The middle half of the light bulb lifetime data has a range that is five years wide.

c

A statistics student gave a survey to students which asked how many first cousins they have. The data from the first nine responses are shown below. 6, 2, 7, 8, 8, 8, 5, 10, 10 What is the IQR of the data? 2.52 first cousins 3 first cousins 3.5 first cousins 8 first cousins

c

An indoor running track is 200 meters in length. During a 3,000-meter race, runners must complete 15 laps of the track. An electronic timing device records the time it takes each runner to complete a lap for every lap in the race. These are called lap times. The histogram below displays the lap times for Stefano, a runner in the 3,000-meter race. Which interval contains the median lap time? 36-37 seconds 37-38 seconds 38-39 seconds 39-40 seconds

c

IQ scores are collected from a sample of students at a large university. The scores are shown below. 99, 100, 105, 104, 102, 105, 105, 121, 104 What is the mean IQ for this sample? 102 104 105 110

c

One drive-through car wash facility offers three different types of washes: basic, deluxe, and supreme. The manager of the car wash facility tallies customer selections over three days: What proportion of customers selected the deluxe car wash? 0.1698 0.2264 0.5283 0.5584

c

People of different ages were asked the question "Do you listen to audiobooks?" The bar chart displays the percentage of "yes" responses in each age group. Which of the following statements is correct? More 18- to 25-year-olds listen to audiobooks than 26- to 35-year-olds. Fewer 18- to 25-year-olds listen to audiobooks than 13- to 17-year-olds. More 36- to 45-year-olds listen to audiobooks than 26- to 35-year-olds. Fewer 36- to 45-year-olds listen to audiobooks than 26- to 35-year-olds.

c

Several students were selected to participate in a two-question survey. They were asked if they prefer a cat or dog as a pet and if they prefer salad or soup for lunch. The results are displayed below. Which of the following statements is true about the graph? The percentage of people who prefer salad for lunch is larger for those who prefer dogs as pets. The percentage of people who prefer soup for lunch is larger for those who prefer cats as pets. The percentage of people who prefer salad for lunch is about the same no matter what their pet preference. The percentage of people who prefer soup for lunch is smaller for those who prefer dogs as pets.

c

Shoppers were surveyed about their spending for holiday shopping. The standard deviation of the amount shoppers spent was $125. Which of the following is the best interpretation of this value? Fifty percent of the amount shoppers spent is above $125. The middle half of the amount shoppers spent has a range that is $125 wide. The amount shoppers spent typically varies by about $125 from the mean. The difference between the largest and smallest amounts shoppers spent was $125.

c

The dotplot below displays the difference in scores for 18 games between a high school soccer team and its opponent. What percentage of games were won by the high school soccer team? 17% 28% 72% 83%

c

The dotplot below displays the number of math classes taken by a random sample of students at a high school. Which of the following is the best description of the shape and center of the dotplot? The distribution of math classes is skewed left with a center around 4 classes. The distribution of math classes is skewed left with a center between 3 and 4 classes. The distribution of math classes is unimodal symmetric with a center around 4 classes. The distribution of math classes is unimodal symmetric with a center between 3 and 4 classes.

c

The five-number summary of a data set is given below. Minimum: 3 Q1: 12 Median: 15 Q3: 16 Maximum: 20 Which of the following is the IQR for this distribution? 1 3 4 5

c

The number of students enrolled at a school varies from year to year. For the first eight years the school is open, the number of students enrolled is recorded in the table shown. The equation of the least-squares regression line isŷ = 68.5 + 11.4x, where ŷ is the number of students enrolled and x is number of years the school has been open. Which shows the residual plot?

c

The parallel boxplots below display the quiz grades (out of 30) for two of Mrs. Smith's Statistics classes. Which class performed better on this quiz? Class 1 performed better because their scores ranged from 12 to 30. Class 1 performed better because their median score is higher than the median score for class 2. Class 2 performed better because their median score is higher than the median score for class 1. Class 2 performed better because the distribution of quiz grades is approximately symmetric.

c

The parallel dotplots below display the number of hours spent studying for a final exam by each of two classes. Which of the following is a true statement? The range for the distribution of the number of hours spent studying for calculus is larger. The range for the distribution of the number of hours spent studying for statistics is larger. There is a larger standard deviation in the distribution of the number of hours spent studying for calculus. The standard deviation for the distributions of number of hours spent studying is the same for both classes.

c

The president of the student council wants to survey the student population about parking. She decides to use a random number table to take a random sample of 100 of the 1,020 students at the school. What is the smallest number of digits that should be used to label the population?

not 3

The picture graph below displays the number of miles for each leg of a triathlon, in which the participants swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles, and run 26.2 miles. Is this graph misleading? No, because the pictures accurately represent the number of miles for each leg of the triathlon. No, because the height of each column corresponds to the number of miles for each leg of the triathlon. Yes, because the pictures do not accurately represent the proportions of the distances for each leg of the triathlon. Yes, because the height of each column does not represent the number of miles for each leg of the triathlon.

c

The stemplot below represents the number of bite-size snacks grabbed by 10 students in an activity for a statistics class. What is the correct set of data for the stemplot? 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 23, 32, 42 15, 16, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23, 32, 42 15, 16, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 23, 32, 42 15, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 23, 32, 42

c

Three car dealerships were surveyed about the percentage of vehicles on their lot with automatic or manual transmissions. The results are displayed below. Which of the following statements are true, according to the graph? Dealership A has the highest percentage of automatic transmissions. Dealership B has the highest percentage of automatic transmissions. Dealership C has the highest percentage of automatic transmissions. All three dealerships have approximately the same percentage of automatic transmissions.

c

The graph displays the vacation preferences of people in relation to their states of residency. Which state has the smallest proportion of residents who prefer nature vacations?

california

An investor has an opportunity to invest in three companies. She researched each company and collected the information in the table below. Which company would provide the best investment?

company B

two-sample problems

compare 2 populations or 2 treatments (2 independent SRSs from 2 distinct populations)

The table shows the proportion of US e-commerce revenue for 2016-2018 for each day of Thanksgiving weekend. The greatest proportion of 2018 e-commerce revenue came on Cyber Monday, contributing one-third of the total 2018 e-commerce revenue. This statement is- Of 2016's e-commerce revenue, $25 billion came on Black Friday. This statement is -

correct incorrect 25 percent should replace 25 billion

A college graduate seeks a job as an executive assistant and collects data on starting salaries from 200 companies: 100 private and 100 public. The data are summarized in the cumulative relative frequency histograms below. Using the histograms, what is a correct comparison of public and private starting salaries? Both salary distributions are skewed left. In both groups, more than 10 percent of salaries are greater than $55,000. The median salary for both groups is between $45,000 and $50,000. Both private and public salaries range from a low of $35,000 to $40,000 to a high of $60,000 to $65,000.

d

A popular restaurant advertises that it delivers its orders within 30 minutes. Suppose the average delivery time for one restaurant is 27 minutes with a standard deviation of three minutes. What is the delivery time with a z-score of 1.2? 23.4 minutes 27.4 minutes 28.2 minutes 30.6 minutes

d

A statistics student gave a survey to students which asked how many first cousins they have. The data from the first nine responses are shown below. 6, 2, 7, 8, 8, 8, 5, 10, 10 What is the range of the data? 2.52 first cousins 3.5 first cousins 4 first cousins 8 first cousins

d

A survey asked 25 students about their favorite sport. A frequency table of the responses is listed below. Which of the following is the correct bar graph for the students' favorite sport?

d

In a certain breed of cattle, the length of gestation has a mean of 284 days and a standard deviation is 5.5 days. What is the z-score for a gestation period that lasts 290 days? -1.09 -1.00 1.00 1.09

d

In a certain breed of cattle, the length of gestation has a mean of 284 days and a standard deviation is 5.5 days. One length of gestation had a z-score of -1.70. Which of the following sentences best interprets this z-score? The length of this gestation period was longer than the mean length of gestation periods by 1.7 days. The length of this gestation period was shorter than the mean length of gestation periods by 1.7 days. The length of this gestation period was longer than the mean length of gestation periods by 1.7 standard deviations. The length of this gestation period was shorter than the mean length of gestation periods by 1.7 standard deviations.

d

An outlier is a data value that differs greatly from other values in a data set. Complete the statements about the outlier rule. If any values in the data set are - the upper boundary, then those values are upper outliers. If any values in the data set are - the lower boundary, then those values are lower outliers.

greater than less than

In the US, the gear shift for a car with a manual transmission is on the right-hand side of the driver. Does this discourage those who are left-handed from driving a manual transmission car? Several drivers were surveyed about their handedness and the type of transmission they have in their automobile. The results are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between handedness and type of transmission used? There is an association because the distribution of transmission type differs among the handedness groups. There is an association because the distribution of transmission type is the same among the handedness groups. There is no association because the distribution of transmission type differs among the handedness groups. There is no association because the distribution of transmission type is the same among the handedness groups.

d

Several students were selected to participate in a two-question survey. They were asked if they prefer a cat or dog as a pet, and if they prefer soup or salad for lunch. The results are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between pet preference and lunch preference? There is an association because the distribution of lunch preference differs among the pet groups. There is an association because distribution of lunch preference is approximately the same among the pet groups. There is no association because the distribution of lunch preference differs among the pet groups. There is no association because the distribution of lunch preference is approximately the same among the pet groups.

d

Some students were surveyed about their eye color and their favorite color. The results are displayed below. Based on the graph, is there an association between eye color and favorite color? There is an association because the distribution of favorite colors differs among the eye-color groups. There is an association because the distribution of favorite colors is the same among the eye-color groups. There is no association because the distribution of favorite color differs among the eye-color groups. There is no association because the distribution of favorite colors is the same among the eye-color groups.

d

The boxplot displays the arm spans for 44 students. Which of the following is not a true statement? There are no outliers in this distribution. The shape of the boxplot is fairly symmetric. The range of the distribution is around 60 cm. The center of the distribution is around 180 cm.

d

The boxplot displays the grades (out of 30) that 26 students received on a quiz. Which of the following statements is false? The distribution of quiz grades is skewed left. The distribution of quiz grades has an IQR of 4. The distribution of quiz grades has four outliers. The distribution of quiz grades has a center around 21.

d

The pie chart below indicates the eye colors of students in a statistics class. Which of the following could be the percentage of students with brown eyes? 10% 15% 20% 35%

d

The stemplot below displays the grades (out of 30) that 26 students received on a quiz. Identify the outliers, if they exist. There are no outliers. 12, 14, 15 12, 14, 30 12, 14, 15, 16

d

The stemplot below displays the times, in seconds, for 25 students to run 100 meters. Which of the boxplots correctly displays the data?

d

The maker of a cell phone screen protector would like to estimate the proportion of customers who file a warranty claim. To do so, they select a random sample of 200 customers and determine that the 96% confidence interval for the true proportion of customers who file a warranty claim to be 0.15 to 0.28. Which of the following would decrease the margin of error?

decreasing the confidence level

A golf course has 18 holes. A guidebook provided to golfers includes useful information about each hole. The individuals in this data set are shown below. Which of the variables in the data set is a categorical variable?

difficulty level

This scatterplot shows the size versus monthly rent for 20 apartment complexes in the same urban area. Complete each statement.

does not weakens does strengthens

The graph shows the relationship between the temperature and the number of bottles of water sold at a concession stand. Complete the sentence. The circled point

does not greatly change

The graph shows the relationship between years of job experience and job performance rating. Complete the sentence.

does not greatly change

The manufacturer of an iced tea brand is tweaking its formula and conducting a taste test to see if the original flavor or the new flavor is preferred. The tea is served to 150 taste testers in identical cups with no labels, and their preferences are recorded. The cups have "A" or "B" marked on the bottom to identify which flavor is in each cup, and they are presented in a random order so that the test administrators do not know what flavor is in each cup until after the taste tester makes their choice.

double blind

"p̂ "

estimate of the population proportion

A men's basketball coach would like to know if there is a relationship between how tall a player is and how high he can jump. Complete the statement based on the information. In this situation, height is the - and how high he can jump is the -.

explanatory variable response variable

The weight (in pounds) and height (in inches) for a child were measured every few months over a two-year period. The results are displayed in the scatterplot. The equation ŷ = 17.4 + 0.5x is called the least-squares regression line because it

is least able to make accurate predictions for the data. makes the strongest association between weight and height. -minimizes the sum of the squared distances from the actual y-value to the predicted y-value. maximizes the sum of the squared distances from the actual y-value to the predicted y-value.

Complete the statements based on the pie chart. The two most expensive costs to build a house are the agent and taxestaxes and landX land and labor✔ labor and materials. The least expensive cost to build a house is the ✔ agenttaxeslandlabormaterials.

labor and materials agent

The stemplot shows the average temperatures in January and February. Use this graphic to answer the question. Complete the statements based on the stemplot. The January temperature values vary - the February temperature values. Average January temperatures tend to be -the average February temperatures.

less than lower than

Complete the statements based on the dotplots. The highway MPG values vary - the city MPG values. Average highway MPG values tend to be - average city MPG.

less than higher than

margin of error for population proportion equation

m= z*√(p̂ (1-p̂ )/n)

Ms. Willems made separate histograms showing the study times of students who passed the exam and students who did not pass. Use this graphic to complete the statement comparing the histograms. Students who passed the test generally studied - those that did not pass.

more than

change to make to the equation: n= (z*/m)^2(p*(1-p*))

n=(z*/m)^2(0.5)^2

A director of a company notices that there is a curved relationship between the company's sales revenue and customer satisfaction. Here is a scatterplot of the data. Describe the scatterplot. The relationship between height and vertical jump distance is

negative nonlinear strong no

is there a cure for fundamental flaws (i.e. voluntary response)

no

The dean of students at a large college is interested in learning about their opinions regarding the percentage of first-year students who should be given parking privileges in the main lot. He sends out an email survey to all students about this issue. A large number of first-year students reply but very few sophomores, juniors, and seniors reply. Based on the responses he receives, he constructs a 90% confidence interval for the true proportion of students who believe first-year students should be given parking privileges in the main lot to be (0.71, 0.79). Which of the following may have an impact on the confidence interval, but is not accounted for by the margin of error?

nonresponse bias

A brand of frozen green beans lists a weight of 32 ounces on its bag. Because of variability in the manufacturing process, the bags often contain slightly more, or less, than 32 ounces of green beans. An inspector takes a random sample of 25 bags of green beans and records their weights. The weights and their relative frequencies are summarized in the histogram below. Which is a true statement about the bags of green beans in the sample? Twenty percent of the bags have a weight below 32.2 ounces. Sixty percent of the bags have a weight over 32.2 ounces. Eighty percent of the bags have a weight over 32.2 ounces. The interval from 32.3 to 32.4 contains the highest proportion of bags.

not a

Thirty-six students at a large university were given a test to measure their intelligence quotient (IQ). A histogram of the IQ test scores is shown below. In each interval, the left endpoint is included in the interval, but not the right endpoint. In which interval is the median located? 99-102 102-105 105-108 108-111

not a

A movie theater offers three types of tickets: child, student, and adult. Ticket sales for two movies are shown in the table. If a ticket was sold for Space Force, what is the probability it was a student ticket?

not a maybe b

The stemplot displays 26 students' scores on a 90-point statistics test. Which of the following best describes the shape of the distribution of test scores? bimodal and symmetric slightly skewed left slightly skewed right heavily skewed right

not a maybe b

A sample of adults was asked to choose their favorite sport to watch from a list of four sports. Given that an adult likes soccer, what is the probability the adult is aged 18-30? 8.1% 18.1% 24.5% 44.4%

not a maybe d

Food services for a school district examined the choices of side dish for students at three types of schools in the district: elementary school, middle school, and high school. Given that a student chose apple wedges, what is the probability that the student is in high school? 9.0% 22.5% 28.1% 40.0%

not a maybe d

Passengers traveling by airplane have two options for their bags: carry-on (for smaller bags) or check (for large bags). An airline examines the baggage choices of its customers on a selection of short flights (less than 500 miles) and long flights (more than 500 miles). What is the probability that a customer is on a short flight, given that the customer has a carry-on bag?

not a maybe d

A student collected data on the size of coffee chosen by customers at a convenience store, and whether the customers took their coffee with cream, sugar, or both. Given that a customer likes both cream and sugar, what is the probability that the customer chose a large coffee? 18.8% 28.6% 52.5% 56.8%

not b maybe c

As an introduction to probability, a student is asked to roll a fair, six-sided number cube seven times. The results of those seven rolls are shown below. 1, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 5 What is the standard deviation of the data? 1.41 1.53 2.33 5

not c

The stemplot below displays the arm spans, in centimeters, for 20 students. Identify the outliers, if they exist. There are no outliers. 153 202 192, 202

not c

Some teenagers collected trash for a beach cleanup. The data for the number of pounds of trash collected by each teenager are shown below. 26, 26, 21, 22, 20, 25, 35 What is the standard deviation of the data? 0 pounds 4.66 pounds 5.03 pounds 25.33 pounds

not d

Thirteen students in a statistics class were asked how many siblings they have. Their responses are listed below. 0, 1, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 5, 5, 6 Which of the following boxplots correctly displays the data?

not d

The dotplots below display the scores for two classes on a 30-point statistics quiz. Class A has 26 students and Class B has 25 students. Which statement best compares the scores for Class A to Class B? The median score for Class A is lower than Class B's. The median score for Class B is lower than Class A's. The median score for Class A is higher than Class B's. The median score for Class B is about the same as Class A's.

not d maybe a

In a recent survey, students were asked how long they play video games in one sitting. The interquartile range of the length of play times was 43 minutes. Which of the following is the best interpretation of this value? Fifty percent of the video game data is below 43 minutes. The middle half of the video game data has a range that is 43 minutes wide. The number of minutes played by students typically varies by about 43 minutes from the mean. The difference between the smallest and largest values in the video game data was 43 minutes.

not d maybe b

Test scores for 26 students in an introductory statistics course are displayed in the stemplot below. The scores range from 72 to 98. The teacher wants to encourage her students by reporting that, overall, the scores were high. Should she use the mean or median to summarize the center of the distribution of scores? She could choose either one because they are equal. She should report the mean because it will be greater than the median. She should report the median because it will be greater than the mean. All the missing scores are needed in order to decide.

not d maybe b

The distribution of ages of runners in a marathon is approximately normal. The oldest participant was 80 and the youngest was 13. Which of the following statements is true of the mean and median ages of the runners? The mean is less than the median. The mean is greater than the median. The mean and median are approximately equal. The actual ages of all runners are needed to decide.

not d maybe c

A nutritionist selected a random sample of adults and asked them about their eating and exercise habits. The data show that people who eat organic fruits and vegetables are more likely to exercise regularly than those who do not eat organic fruits and vegetables. Does this scenario describe an observational study or an experiment?

observational study

This table shows the relationship between time and push-ups. Which of the following values could represent the value of r2 for this relationship?

r2 = 0.9646

what error does the margin of error in a confidence interval cover?

random sampling errors -does NOT cover practical problems (nonresponse, undercoverage)

A biology student wants to determine if using a fertilizer would help promote growth of new babies in spider plants. He also believes that the type of spider plant may also affect the propagation. The student gets 90 plants, 30 of each spider plant variety: green, variegated, and curly. They all are potted in the same amount and type of soil, given the same amount of water, and exposed to the same amount of light. For each type of plant, the plants with similar sizes are placed in groups of two and labeled with the numbers 1 and 2. The letters A and B are written on equal-sized slips of paper and placed in a bag. The bag is shaken and, for the first group of two, a slip is drawn. If A is drawn, plant 1 will receive fertilizer and plant 2 will not receive fertilizer. If B is drawn, then plant 2 will receive fertilizer and plant 1 will not receive fertilizer. The slip is placed back into the bag and the bag is shaken. This procedure is repeated until all 90 plants have been assigned a treatment. After one year, the shoots will be counted for each plant. Which of the following describes the design for this experiment?

observational study matched pairs design -randomized block design completely randomized design

A biology student wants to determine if using a fertilizer would help promote the growth of new babies in spider plants. The student has access to 90 baby spider plants of three varieties: green, variegated, and curly. There are 30 plants of each variety. They all are potted in the same amount and type of soil, given the same amount of water, and exposed to the same amount of light. The numbers 1-30 are written on slips of paper, placed in a hat, and mixed thoroughly. A plant is selected and a slip of paper is drawn. If the slip has the numbers 1-15, then the plant will receive fertilizer. If the slip has the numbers 16-30, the plant will not receive fertilizer. A green spider plant is selected and a slip of paper is drawn. This plant is placed in the treatment group indicated by the number, and the slip is not put back in the bag. The slips are mixed again, the next green spider plant is selected, and a slip is drawn. The plant is placed in the treatment group indicated by the number. This procedure is repeated until all 30 green spider plants are assigned to treatments. The numbered slips are placed back in the bag and this procedure is repeated for the remaining types of spider plants. After one year, the shoots will be counted for each plant. Which of the following best describes the design for this experiment?

observational study matched pairs design -randomized block design completely randomized design

does the one-sided or two-sided Ha have stronger evidence against Ho?

one-sided

The following are the times, in seconds, that 15 people spent taking an online survey. 125, 91, 261, 25, 155, 105, 195,132, 110, 143, 121, 99, 167, 165, 160 Which statement is true?

only 261 is an outlier

The graph shows the relationship between the test scores and the number of daily hours using electronics. Complete the sentence that describes the circled point. The circled point appears to be a(n)

outlier does not large is

The proportion of all high school students who watch national news is p = 0.47. A random sample of 50 high school students is selected. Which of the following is the mean of the sampling distribution of ?

p=0.47

A waitress wondered if there was an association between the type of food and the type of drink customers ordered. The results are displayed below. Which food order had the lowest percentage of customers ordering no drink?

pasta

A manager surveyed a random sample of people exiting a movie theater about their use of streaming movies. Complete the statements based on the information. A - is not an appropriate display of the data because these data -.

pie chart are not part of the same whole

Explain how the given graph is deceptive. Complete the statements based on the bar graph. By not starting the horizontal axis at 0, the - bar appears to be about one-fourth the height of the Pecan bar. The- bar appears to be about one-half the height of the Pecan bar. The - bar appears to be less than one-half the height of the Pecan bar. This misleads the viewer to - the number of each type of nut used in salads.

pine nut walnut almond underestimate

A participant in an experiment who incorrectly believes she is receiving treatment and reports an improvement in their condition is experiencing

placebo effect

"p"

population proportion

A men's basketball coach would like to know if there is a relationship between how tall a player is and how high he can jump. Here is a scatterplot of the data. Describe the scatterplot. The relationship between height and vertical jump distance is - -, and -. There are - unusual observations.

positive linear strong no

A company makes a $5 profit on each non-faulty product it sells. Approximately 2% of the products manufactured are faulty, with no way to discover which ones are faulty before delivery. If replacement-and-repair costs for the faulty products are $100 each, what is the profit per item?

profit of $2.90

"p̂ " equation

p̂ = x / n

The table shows Tampa's average monthly temperature and precipitation for 6 months in 2018. What is the value of r? Round to the nearest hundredth.

r = .50

The stemplot shows the average high temperature for US cities in January. Complete the statements based on the stemplot. This distribution of high temperatures is - . There appears to be - outlier(s) in the data. The high temperatures vary from - to -Based on the shape, the center of the data appears to fall in the range of

roughly symmetric 0 24 76 40 to 50

A director of a company notices that there is a nonlinear relationship between the company's sales revenue and customer satisfaction. The relationship is strong, so customer satisfaction can easily be predicted from the company's sales revenue. Complete the statement based on the information. In this situation, the explanatory variable is the - . and the response variable is the

sales revenue customer satisfaction

The governor of Florida would like to estimate the mean age of all Florida residents. To do so, he randomly selects 500 Florida residents and determines their mean age to be 58.2 years. However, according the most recent census data, the mean age of all Florida residents is 55.6 years. Which of the following properly describes the 500 Florida residents who were randomly selected?

sample

A farmer of a large apple orchard would like to estimate the true mean number of suitable apples produced per tree. He selects a random sample of 40 trees from his large orchard and determines with 95% confidence that the true mean number of suitable apples produced per tree is between 375 and 520 apples. Which of the following can be accounted for by the margin of error of this interval?

sampling variation

An animal rescue agent wanted to estimate the true proportion of all animals in shelters that are adopted each month. To do so, she selects a random sample of 100 animals that were in shelters last month and determines that the 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of animals adopted is between 0.12 and 0.24. This interval has a margin of error of 0.06. Which of the following can be accounted for by the margin of error?

sampling variation

The maker of a cell phone screen protector would like to estimate the proportion of customers who file a warranty claim. To do so, they select a random sample of 200 customers and determine that the 96% confidence interval for the true proportion of customers who file a warranty claim to be 0.15 to 0.28. Which of the following can be accounted for by the margin of error of this interval?

sampling variation

A men's basketball coach would like to know if there is a relationship between how tall a player is and how high he can jump. He collects the following data from every member of the team. Examine the scatterplots provided in this graphic. Which one correctly displays these data?

scatterplot A

what are the similarities and differences between the t-statistic and the standard Normal distribution?

similarities: -single-peaked -symmetric about 0 -bell-shaped differences: -bigger spread -more probability in tails -less probability in centre

A teacher knows that scores on one of her tests are heavily left skewed, with a mean score of 78 and a standard deviation of 18. She randomly selects 15 grades and records the mean score. What is the shape of the distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 15 from this population?

skewed left

Hannah has a chicken coop with six hens. Let X represent the total number of eggs the hens lay on a random day. The distribution for X is displayed in the histogram. What is the shape of this histogram?

skewed left

The owner of a local movie theater keeps track of the number of tickets sold in each purchase. The owner determines the probabilities based on these records. Let X represent the number of tickets bought in one purchase. The distribution for X is displayed in the histogram. What is the shape of this histogram?

skewed right

The prices of houses in the US are strongly skewed to the right with a mean of $383,500 and a standard deviation of $289,321. A real estate agent takes a random sample of 10 houses and records the mean price. What is the shape of the distribution of the sample mean for all possible random samples of size 10 from this population?

skewed right

The manager of a neighborhood plant nursery measured the height of every tree on the lot. The mean height of the trees was 75 inches and the median height was 62 inches. What is the shape of the distribution?

skewed to the right

A zoo collected data on the diving times of turtles. Based on the data, the regression line is ŷ = 0.010 + 2.515x, where x is the time of the dive, in minutes. What are the slope and y-intercept of the regression line?

slope: 2.515, y-intercept: 0.010

how does sample size affect statistical significance?

small population effects can be highly significant when the sample is large

A real estate agent would like to know how much she can expect a home to sell for depending upon the square footage of the home. Complete the statement based on the information. In this case, the explanatory variable is the - and the response variable is the -.

square footage selling price

Recall information from the previous task. A snack-size bag of carrots has a mean weight of 1.75 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.1 ounce. Kendra bought a snack-size bag of carrots to measure and found that her bag of snacks weighed 1.68 ounces. The z-score of Kendra's bag of carrots is -0.70. Complete the statement interpreting the z-score.

standard deviation, below

Data from a study on state populations are being gathered. The data set contains information about the state name, the state bird, the population in 2018, the percent of population increase or decrease since 2010, and the area (in square feet) of the state. Which variable would be classified as categorical?

state bird

The governor of Florida would like to estimate the mean age of all Florida residents. To do so, he randomly selects 500 Florida residents and determines their mean age to be 58.2 years. However, according the most recent census data, the mean age of all Florida residents is 55.6 years. Which of the following properly describes the number 58.2?

statistic

p-value

strength of the evidence against the null hypothesis

-The scatterplot shows the relationship between the amount of money in retirement accounts after x years of withdrawals. Based on the correlation coefficient, complete the description of the relationship. The value of r indicates a

strong negative decreases

The scatterplot shows the relationship between the population density and the number of years since 1995 for a county. Complete each statement.

strong positive association the same the same

The top vote-getters for the formation of a jazz ensemble are shown. Which column shows the individuals in the study?

student

The graph shows the relationship between the speed Alex runs on a treadmill (mph) and his heart rate (bpm). Complete the sentence. The circled point

substantially decreases

The graph shows the relationship between age and the number of miles run each week. Complete the sentence. The circled poin

substantially increases

What are the three basic types of hypothesis tests for the population mean(μ) for matched pairs?

test Ho:μd=0 against: 1. Ha:μd>0 2. Ha:μd<0 3. Ha:μd≠0

A community is considering raising funds to pay for improvements to the community swimming pool. To measure the level of interest, community leaders went door-to-door in a few neighborhoods and interviewed residents. Of the 230 residents contacted, 157 support raising funds to pay for improvements. Which of the following represents the sample in this setting?

the 230 residents who were interviewed

type 2 error

the Ho in accepted when the Ha is actually true

robust procedures

the confidence level or p-value does not change very much when the assumptions of the procedure are violated

An observational study of suburban towns reveals that towns with more dedicated park land tend to have higher median home prices. A real estate agent suggests that a town's crime rate is a more accurate predictor of median home price. What is the confounding variable in this study?

the crime rate

what happens when the degrees of freedom increase for the t distribution?

the density curve looks moe like N(0,1)

statistical significance

the sample showed an effect larger than would often occur just by chnace

what is the probability of a type 1 error?

the significance level= the probability

what is used in a two-sample problem to determine the degrees of freedom? -why?

the smaller of n1-1 and n2-1 -results in a larger confidence interval

which statistic is the most robust?

the two-sample statistic

The following are the amounts, in dollars, that 15 items sold for at a silent auction as part of a school fundraiser. 15, 24, 89, 76, 45, 32, 55, 140,72, 21, 52, 68, 81, 33, 40 Which statement is true?

there are no outliers

A farmer grows watermelons and cantaloupes. Let X represent the weight of a watermelon, and let Y represent the weight of a cantaloupe. The mean of X is 12 pounds, and the mean of Y is 3 pounds. Which answer choice correctly calculates and interprets the mean of the sum, S = X + Y?

this farmer can expect the total weight of a watermelon and a cantaloupe, on average, to be 15 pounds.

An environmentalist would like to compare the mean number of miles per gallon (mpg) obtained by filling up with E85 versus regular unleaded gasoline. To do so, he selects a random sample of 100 vehicle owners and asks them to report their fuel economy (in mpg) for their next fill-up. He notices that some of the participants drive compact cars, some drive mid-sized cars, some drive trucks, and some drive SUVs. The researcher wants to use a matched pairs design. In order to isolate the effect of fuel type on fuel economy, what should the researcher use as pairs?

vehicles of similar sizes

what do we always round up?

when calculating the sample size (n)

when should we use the t procedure?

when n=40, n>40, or when 15>n>40 (+no outliers)

Is the sample mean time until blinking (x̄ = 36 seconds) statistically significant evidence that the true mean time that students can go without blinking is greater than 30 seconds? Use the results to answer the question.

yes In this case, 13 percent✔of the simulated sample means are ✔ 36 or more, which is less than 5 percent

what do you do when the degrees of freedom is not on table c?

you round down

According to historical data, it is believed that 12% of American adults work more than one job. To investigate if this claim is still accurate, a random sample of 100 American adults is selected. It is discovered that 18 of them work more than one job. A researcher would like to know if the data provide convincing evidence that the true proportion of American adults who work more than one job differs from 12%. What are the values of the test statistic and P-value for this test?

z = 1.85, P-value = 0.0644

The arm span and foot length were measured (in centimeters) for each of the 19 students in a statistics class and displayed in the scatterplot. An analysis was completed, and the computer output is shown. PredictorCoefSE Coeft-ratiopConstant-7.6112.5672.9650.046Arm span0.1860.0355.3770.000 S = 1.61R-Sq = 63.0%R-Sq(Adj) = 62.7% Using the computer output, what is the equation of the least-squares regression line?

ŷ = -7.611 + 0.186x

The table shows the points allowed and wins by each Big 10 West football team in 2018. Let x represent the points allowed and ŷ represent the predicted wins. Which correctly states the equation for the least-squares regression line and the interpretation of its y-intercept?

ŷ = 14.92 ‒ 0.02x; A team that allows 0 points is predicted to have about 15 wins.

The table shows students' scores on two papers Let x represent the paper 1 score (out of 40) and ŷrepresent the predicted paper 2 score (out of 100). Which correctly states the equation for the least-squares regression line and the interpretation of its slope?

ŷ = 5.2 + 2.2x; scoring 1 more point on paper 1 is associated with a 2.2-point increase on paper 2.

what does "d" stand for in matched pairs hypothesis tests?

μ1-μ2

Over morning announcements, the principal states that only 20% of the senior class turned in their graduation survey. You find the principal's statement hard to believe because the office previously announced that a coupon for a free large pizza would be given to seniors who turn in their graduation survey. At lunch time, you select a random sample of 10 seniors and ask them if they turned in their graduation survey. Six seniors say "yes." Using technology, the student simulated the sample percent of seniors that turned in their survey using 50 random samples of 10 students under the assumption that 20% of all seniors turned in their survey. Here are the results. Is the sample percentage obtained by the student (60%) statistically significant evidence that greater than 20% of seniors turned in their graduation survey?

✔ Yes. In this case, ✔ 0 percent of the simulated sample means are ✔ 60 percent or more, which is ✔ less than 5 percent.


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