results from previous studies showed 79% of all high school

 

Results from previous studies showed 79% of all high school seniors from a certain city plan to attend college after graduation. A random sample of 200 high school seniors from this city reveals that 162 plan to attend college. Does this indicate that the percentage has increased from that of previous studies? Test at the 5% level of significance.

 

What is your conclusion?

 

 

 

A.Cannot determine  

B.Do not reject H0. There is not enough evidence to support the claim that the proportion of students planning to go to college is greater than .79. 

C.More seniors are going to college 

D.Reject H0. There is enough evidence to support the claim that the proportion of students planning to go to college is now greater than .79. 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 2 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

A manufacturer of flashlight batteries took a sample of 13 batteries from a day’s production and used them continuously until they failed to work. The life lengths of the batteries, in hours, until they failed were: 342, 426, 317, 545, 264, 451, 1049, 631, 512, 266, 492, 562, and 298.

 

 

 

At the .05 level of significance, is there evidence to suggest that the mean life length of the batteries produced by this manufacturer is more than 400 hours?

 

 

 

A.No, because the test value 1.257 is greater than the critical value 1.115 

B.Yes, because the test value 1.257 is less than the critical value 1.782 

C.No, because the p-value for this test is equal to .1164 

D.Yes, because the test value 1.257 is less than the critical value 2.179 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 3 of 20

1.0 Points

 

The form of the alternative hypothesis can be:

 

 

 

A.two-tailed 

  B.one-tailed 

C.neither one nor two-tailed 

  D.one or two-tailed 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 4 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 A lab technician is tested for her consistency by taking multiple measurements of cholesterol levels from the same blood sample. The target accuracy is a variance in measurements of 1.2 or less. If the lab technician takes 16 measurements and the variance of the measurements in the sample is 2.2, does this provide enough evidence to reject the claim that the lab technician’s accuracy is within the target accuracy?

 

At the a = .01 level of significance, what is your conclusion?

 

 

 

 

 

 

A.Cannot determine  

B.Do not reject H0. At the f$alpha f$  = .01 level of significance there is not sufficient evidence to suggest that this technician’s true variance is greater than the target accuracy.  

C.Reject H0. At the f$alpha f$  = .01 level of significance, there is enough evidence to support the claim that this technician’s variance is larger than the target accuracy. 

  D.

        Reject H0.  At the f$alpha f$  = .01 level of significance, there is not enough evidence to support the claim that this technician’s true variance is larger than the target accuracy.

 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 5 of 20

1.0 Points

 

A lab technician is tested for her consistency by taking multiple measurements of cholesterol levels from the same blood sample. The target accuracy is a variance in measurements of 1.2 or less. If the lab technician takes 16 measurements and the variance of the measurements in the sample is 2.2, does this provide enough evidence to reject the claim that the lab technician’s accuracy is within the target accuracy?

 

State the null and alternative hypotheses.

 

 

 

 

  A.H0: s2 < 1.2, H1: s2 ≠ 1.2 

  B.H0: s2 ≠ 1.2, H1: s2 = 1.2 

  C.H0: s2 ≤ 1.2, H1: s2 > 1.2 

  D.H0: s2 ≥ 1.2, H1: s2 ≠ 1.2 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 6 of 20

1.0 Points

 

Which of the following statements are true of the null and alternative hypotheses?

 

 

 

A.It is possible for neither hypothesis to be true 

B.It is possible for both hypotheses to be true 

C.Both hypotheses must be true 

D.Exactly one hypothesis must be true 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 7 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

In an article appearing in Today’s Health a writer states that the average number of calories in a serving of popcorn is 75. To determine if the average number of calories in a serving of popcorn is different from 75, a nutritionist selected a random sample of 20 servings of popcorn and computed the sample mean number of calories per serving to be 78 with a sample standard deviation of 7.

 

State the null and alternative hypotheses.

 

 

 

 

 

  A.H0: f$mu f$  f$leq f$  75, H1: f$mu f$  > 75 

  B.H0: f$mu f$  f$geq f$  75, H1: f$mu f$  < 75 

  C.H0: f$mu f$  = 75, H1: f$mu f$  > 75 

  D.H0: f$mu f$  = 75, H1: f$mu f$  ≠ 75 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 8 of 20

1.0 Points

 

The “Pizza Hot” manager commits a Type I error if he/she is

 

 

 

A.staying with old style when new style is better 

B.switching to new style when it is no better than old style 

C.staying with old style when new style is no better than old style 

D.switching to new style when it is better than old style 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 9 of 20

1.0 Points

 

Which of the following values is not typically used for f$alpha f$ ?

 

 

 

  A.0.50 

  B.0.10 

  C.0.05 

  D.0.01 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 10 of 20

1.0 Points

 

Smaller p-values indicate more evidence in support of the:

 

 

 

A.quality of the researcher 

B.null hypothesis 

C.the reduction of variance 

D.alternative hypothesis 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 11 of 20

1.0 Points

 

You conduct a hypothesis test and you observe values for the sample mean and sample standard deviation when n = 25 that do not lead to the rejection of H0. You calculate a p-value of 0.0667. What will happen to the p-value if you observe the same sample mean and standard deviation for a sample size larger than 25?

 

 

 

A.The p – value may increase or decrease 

B.The p – value increases 

C.The p – value decreases 

D.The p – value stays the same 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

 

Part 2 of 3 – 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Question 12 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

A statistician wishes to test the claim that the standard deviation of the weights of firemen is greater than 25 pounds. To do so, she selected a random sample of 20 firemen and found s = 27.2 pounds.

 

 Assuming that the weights of firemen are normally distributed, to test her research hypothesis the statistician would use a chi-square test. In that case, what is the computed test value?

 

 Place your answer, rounded to 3 decimal places, in the blank. For example, 23.456 would be a legitimate entry. 

 

 

 

 

Question 13 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

A survey determines that mint chocolate chip is the favorite ice cream flavor of 6% of consumers. An ice cream shop determines that of 260 customers, 20 customers stated their preference for mint chocolate chip.

 

 Find the P-value that would be used to determine if the percentage of customers who prefer mint chocolate chip ice has increased at a 5% level of significance.

 

 P-value:  Round your answer to four decimal places as necessary.

 

 

 

 

Question 14 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

The ABC battery company claims that their batteries last at least 100 hours, on average. Your experience with their batteries has been somewhat different, so you decide to conduct a test to see if the company’s claim is true. You believe that the mean life is actually less than the 100 hours the company claims. You decide to collect data on the average battery life (in hours) of a random sample of n = 20 batteries. Some of the information related to the hypothesis test is presented below.

 

 Test of H0: f$mugeq f$ 100 versus H1: f$mu< f$ 100 

 

 Sample mean 98.5

Std error of mean 0.777

 

 Assuming the life length of batteries is normally distributed, what is the value of the test statistic used to conduct your test of hypothesis?  Place your answer, rounded to 3 decimal places in the blank. For example, -2.345 would be a legitimate entry.   

 

 

 

 

Question 15 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

Suppose a firm that produces light bulbs wants to know whether it can say that its light bulbs typically last more than 1500 hours. Hoping to find support for their claim, the firm collects a random sample of n = 25 light bulbs and records the lifetime (in hours) of each bulb. The information related to the hypothesis test is presented below.

 

 Test of H0: f$muleq f$  1500 versus H1:f$mu f$   > 1500

 Sample mean 1509.5

Std error of mean 4.854

 

 What is the test value that you would use to conduct this test? Place your answer, rounded to 3 decimal places in the blank. For example, 1.234 would be a legitimate entry. 

 

 

 

 

Question 16 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

Suppose a firm that produces light bulbs wants to know whether it can say that its light bulbs typically last more than 1500 hours. Hoping to find support for their claim, the firm collects a random sample of n = 25 light bulbs and records the lifetime (in hours) of each bulb. The information related to the hypothesis test is presented below.

 

 Test of H0: f$muleq f$  1500 versus H1: f$ mu f$  > 1500

 Sample mean 1509.5

Std error of mean 4.854

 

 Assuming the life length of this type of lightbulb is normally distributed, what is the p-value associated with this test? Place your answer, rounded to 3 decimal places in the blank. For example, .123 would be a legitimate entry. 

 

 

 

 

Question 17 of 20

1.0 Points

 

 

 

Accepted characters: numbers, decimal point markers (period or comma), sign indicators (-), spaces (e.g., as thousands separator, 5 000), “E” or “e” (used in scientific notation). NOTE: For scientific notation, a period MUST be used as the decimal point marker.

Complex numbers should be in the form (a + bi) where “a” and “b” need to have explicitly stated values.

For example: {1+1i} is valid whereas {1+i} is not. {0+9i} is valid whereas {9i} is not.

 

The ABC battery company claims that their batteries last at least 100 hours, on average. Your experience with their batteries has been somewhat different, so you decide to conduct a test to see if the company’s claim is true. You believe that the mean life is actually less than the 100 hours the company claims. You decide to collect data on the average battery life (in hours) of a random sample of n = 20 batteries. Some of the information related to the hypothesis test is presented below.

 

 Test of H0:  f$mugeq f$  100 versus H1: f$mu< f$   100

 Sample mean 98.5

Std error of mean 0.777

 

 Assuming the life length of batteries is normally distributed, if you wish to conduct this test using a .05 level of significance, what is the critical value that you should use?   Place your answer, rounded to 3 decimal places in the blank. For example, -1.234 would be a legitimate entry. 

 

 

 

 

 

Part 3 of 3 – 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Question 18 of 20

1.0 Points

 

Using the confidence interval when conducting a two-tailed test for the population proportion p, we reject the null hypothesis if the hypothesized value for p falls inside the confidence interval.

 

 

 

 True

 False

 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 19 of 20

1.0 Points

 

The p-value of a test is the smallest level of significance at which the null hypothesis can be rejected.

 

 

 

 True

 False

 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

Question 20 of 20

1.0 Points

 

Using the confidence interval when conducting a two-tailed test for the population mean, we do not reject the null hypothesis if the hypothesized value for f$mu f$  falls between the lower and upper confidence limits.

 

 

 

 True

 False

 

Reset Selection

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Calculate the price
Make an order in advance and get the best price
Pages (550 words)
$0.00
*Price with a welcome 15% discount applied.
Pro tip: If you want to save more money and pay the lowest price, you need to set a more extended deadline.
We know how difficult it is to be a student these days. That's why our prices are one of the most affordable on the market, and there are no hidden fees.

Instead, we offer bonuses, discounts, and free services to make your experience outstanding.
How it works
Receive a 100% original paper that will pass Turnitin from a top essay writing service
step 1
Upload your instructions
Fill out the order form and provide paper details. You can even attach screenshots or add additional instructions later. If something is not clear or missing, the writer will contact you for clarification.
Pro service tips
How to get the most out of your experience with Australia Assessments
One writer throughout the entire course
If you like the writer, you can hire them again. Just copy & paste their ID on the order form ("Preferred Writer's ID" field). This way, your vocabulary will be uniform, and the writer will be aware of your needs.
The same paper from different writers
You can order essay or any other work from two different writers to choose the best one or give another version to a friend. This can be done through the add-on "Same paper from another writer."
Copy of sources used by the writer
Our college essay writers work with ScienceDirect and other databases. They can send you articles or materials used in PDF or through screenshots. Just tick the "Copy of sources" field on the order form.
Testimonials
See why 20k+ students have chosen us as their sole writing assistance provider
Check out the latest reviews and opinions submitted by real customers worldwide and make an informed decision.
Business and administrative studies
Great effort.
Customer 452615, May 19th, 2022
Other
The PowerPoint Presentation is PHENOMENAL! The writer went above and beyond my expectations! Thank you so much.
Customer 452455, February 15th, 2023
Beauty
Instructions met.
Customer 452441, May 3rd, 2022
Business
Good job
Customer 463245, February 6th, 2023
History
Excellent work.
Customer 463001, June 12th, 2022
Education
Good response.
Customer 454463, May 5th, 2022
Engineering
great work
Customer 454161, May 28th, 2020
Other
Its great, Thank you!
Customer 464127, April 26th, 2023
Marketing
Very good job! I really appreciate the work and effort you've done. it helped me a lot. the feedback has been followed one by one and I appreciate that! I will assign you for future work, and I will be sending a tip soon!
Customer 462787, August 1st, 2022
Military
Good work.
Customer 456821, June 20th, 2022
English 101
Good job.
Customer 462899, April 26th, 2022
Other
The paper is well-written with few errors.
Customer 452455, June 26th, 2023
11,595
Customer reviews in total
96%
Current satisfaction rate
3 pages
Average paper length
37%
Customers referred by a friend
OUR GIFT TO YOU
15% OFF your first order
Use a coupon FIRST15 and enjoy expert help with any task at the most affordable price.
Claim my 15% OFF Order in Chat