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A marketing executive is investigating whether this year's advertising campaign has resulted in greater mean sales compared with last year's mean sales. The executive collects a random sample of 100 customer orders from a large population of orders and calculates the sample mean and sample standard deviation.
Which of the following is the appropriate test for the executive's investigation?
B,
A one-sample t-test for a population mean
A travel company is investigating whether the average cost of a hotel stay in a certain city has increased over the past year. The company recorded the cost of a one-night stay for a Friday night in January of the current year and in the previous year for 31 hotels selected at random. The difference in cost (current year minus previous year) was calculated for each hotel.
Which of the following is the appropriate test for the company's investigation?
D,
A matched-pairs t-test for a mean difference
A report on a certain fast food restaurant states that μ, the mean order total, is $9. The manager of the restaurant believes the mean is higher. A random sample of orders will be selected. The sample mean x¯ will be calculated and used in a hypothesis test to investigate the belief.
Which of the following is the correct set of hypotheses?
D,
H0: μ=9$
Ha:μ>9$
The mean number of sick days per employee taken last year by all employees of a large city was 10.6 days. A city administrator is investigating whether the mean number of sick days this year is different from the mean number of sick days last year. The administrator takes a random sample of 40 employees and finds the mean of the sample to be 12.9. A hypothesis test will be conducted as part of the investigation.
Which of the following is the correct set of hypotheses?
B,
H0: μ=10.6
Ha:μ≠10.6
A local convenience store in a large city closes each day at 10 P.M. The owner of the store is investigating whether mean sales will increase by at least $10 per day if the store remains open until 11 P.M. The owner asked the 41 members of a local civic group to estimate the amount of money they might spend during the extra hour. The sample mean was $11.50. The owner will conduct a one-sample t-test for a population mean.
Have the conditions for inference been met?
B,
No, the sample was not chosen using a random method.
A consumer group wants to know if an automobile insurance company with thousands of customers has an average insurance payout for all their customers that is greater than $500 per insurance claim. They know that most customers have zero payouts and a few have substantial payouts. The consumer group collects a random sample of 18 customers and computes a mean payout per claim of $579.80 with a standard deviation of $751.30.
Is it appropriate for the consumer group to perform a hypothesis test for
E,
No, it is not appropriate because the distribution of the population is skewed and the sample size is not large enough to satisfy the condition that the sampling distribution of the sample mean be approximately normal.
A company that manufactures laptop batteries claims the mean battery life is 16 hours. Assuming the distribution of battery life is approximately normal, a consumer group will conduct a hypothesis test to investigate whether the battery life is less than 16 hours. The group selected a random sample of 14 of the batteries and found an average life of 15.6 hours with a standard deviation of 0.8 hour.
Which of the following is the correct test statistic for the hypothesis test?
D,
t=15.6-16/0.8/√14
A sociologist studying the difference in ages between husbands and wives obtained a random sample of 55 married couples. The mean of the husbands' ages was 38.5 years with standard deviation 12.6 years. The mean of the wives' ages was 36.9 years with standard deviation 12.4 years. The sociologist calculated the difference between the ages for each couple. The mean difference was 1.6 years with standard deviation 2.1 years. A matched-pairs hypothesis test will be performed to investigate whether
B,
2.1/√55
An agency that hires out clerical workers claims its workers can type, on average, at least 60 words per minute (wpm). To test the claim, a random sample of 50 workers from the agency were given a typing test, and the average typing speed was 58.8 wpm. A one-sample t-test was conducted to investigate whether there is evidence that the mean typing speed of workers from the agency is less than 60 wpm. The resulting p-value was 0.267.
Which of the following is a correct interpretation of the p-valu
If the mean typing speed of workers from the agency is 60 wpm, the probability of selecting a sample of 50 workers with mean 58.8 wpm or less is 0.267.
Milk has a pHpH of 6.7, which is slightly acidic. Cheese makers add a culture to milk to lower the pHpH, making it more acidic and turning it into cheese. A manufacturer is experimenting with a new culture that claims to produce a pHpH of 5.2, which is perfect for cheddar cheese. A set of 50 test batches resulted in an average pHpH of 5.11. A one-sample t-test was conducted to investigate whether there is evidence that the mean pHpH is different from 5.2. The test resulted in a p-value of 0.018.
E,
The probability of observing a sample mean of 5.11 or less, or of 5.29 or more, is 0.018 if the true mean is 5.2.
A recent report indicated that families in a certain country typically spend about $175 per week on groceries. To investigate whether families in a certain city typically spend more than $175 per week, an economist selected a random sample of 500 families in the city and found the sample mean to be $176.24. With all conditions for inference met, a hypothesis test resulted in a p-value of 0.0021.
At the significance level of α=0.05α=0.05, which of the following is a correct conclusion?
A,
The p-value is less than 0.05, and the null hypothesis is rejected. There is convincing statistical evidence that the mean is greater than $175.
In a certain city, the population mean commute time to work was reported as 30 minutes. The director of human resources for a certain company in the city claimed the mean commute time for the company's employees was greater than 30 minutes. The director surveyed 35 randomly selected employees and found that their mean commute time was 31.4 minutes. With all conditions for inference met, a hypothesis test conducted at the significance level α=0.05α=0.05 resulted in a p-value of 0.381.
Which of
D,
The director does not have convincing statistical evidence to conclude that the population mean commute time is greater than 30 minutes.
An occupational safety officer for a large company is conducting a study to investigate back problems in office workers who use a computer for most of the workday. The study will investigate the difference in back problems for workers who stand and workers who sit. A group of 68 volunteers have agreed to participate in the nine-month study. Half the group is randomly assigned to work while standing, and the other half is assigned to work while sitting. At the end of the study, the mean number of
E,
A two-sample t-interval for a difference between population means
A researcher is investigating whether a new fertilizer affects the yield of tomato plants. As part of an experiment, 20 plants will be randomly assigned the new fertilizer and 20 will be assigned the current fertilizer. The mean number of tomatoes produced per plant will be recorded for each fertilizer, and the difference in the sample means will be calculated.
Which of the following is the appropriate inference procedure for analyzing the results of the experiment?
C,
A two-sample t-interval for a difference between population means
A consumer agency is interested in examining whether there is a difference in two common sealant products used to waterproof residential backyard decks. With cooperation of several builders in the area, they randomly assign 38 newly constructed decks to be treated with Very Clear deck sealant and another 37 newly constructed decks to be treated with Sure Seal deck sealant. After one year of being exposed to similar weather conditions, the decks are rated on a scale of 1 to 100. The mean rating f
B,
(82.9-92.4)±1.688√3.1^2/38+3.8^2/37
A researcher is investigating whether a difference exists in the mean weight of green-striped watermelons grown on two different farms: one that uses organic methods and one that uses nonorganic methods. The mean and standard deviation of the weights in a random sample of 43 watermelons from the organic farm were 18 pounds and 2 pounds, respectively. The mean and standard deviation of the weights in a random sample of 40 watermelons from the nonorganic farm were 20 pounds and 1.7 pounds, respect
D,
√2^2/43+1.7^2/40
A company director investigated whether there is a difference in the mean number of overtime hours worked each week by employees assigned to two different managers. Each manager, A and B, manages 100 employees. Random samples of 35 employees from manager A and 40 employees from manager B were selected. The number of overtime hours worked was recorded for the 75 employees each week.
Have the conditions been met for inference with a confidence interval for the difference in the population means?
C,
No, because the size of at least one of the samples is greater than 10 percent of the population.
In a certain region, many of the residents are employed by the oil industry. Economists in the region investigated the difference between the salaries of those who work in oil-field jobs and those who work in non-oil-field jobs. Salaries were recorded for a random sample of 84 workers from the 1,200 oil-field workers and a random sample of 72 workers from the 50,000 non-oil-field workers in the region. A 95 percent confidence interval for μO−μN, whereμO is the mean salary of all jobs of oil
A,
Yes, all conditions have been met..