Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Exercises
Contents
1 Basic Concepts and Terms in Statistics
2 Sampling Techniques
10
5 Measures of Location
12
6 Measures of Dispersion
13
15
8 Counting
8.1 Fundamental Counting Principle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.2 Permutation and Combination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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9 Probability
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10 Bayes Theorem
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14 Estimation
14.1 Estimation of Means . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.2 Estimation of Proportion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Page 1 of 37
Exercises
15 Hypothesis Testing
15.1 Test on the Mean of a Single Population . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15.2 Test on the Difference of Means of Two Population . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
34
34
34
36
Page 2 of 37
Exercises
Page 3 of 37
Exercises
Page 4 of 37
Exercises
Sampling Techniques
Page 5 of 37
Exercises
(a) In which two years did the Polar Bears have the coldest temperature for their plunge?
(b) In what year did the greatest number of people take part in this event, and in what year did
the fewest take the plunge?
(c) In general how has the popularity of this even changed over the years since 1993? Tell how
you know.
(d) What do you notice about the changes in the number of participants and the air temperatures
from 1998 to 1999? Do you think these two factors are related?
2. Ms. Hearditall keeps track of hard-to-believe excuses her students give for not doing their homework. Check out this circle graph to find out what kinds of excuses Ms. Hearditall gets. Then
answer the questions.
(a) Which kind of excuse do Ms. Hearditalls students give most often?
Prepared by: Celine Sarmiento
Page 6 of 37
Exercises
Page 7 of 37
Exercises
Page 8 of 37
Exercises
Page 9 of 37
Exercises
Page 10 of 37
Exercises
Find the mean, median, and mode of the given grouped data.
9. Find the mean, median, and mode of the grouped data below.
Class Interval Frequency
16-22
13
16
23-29
30-36
24
37-43
19
44-50
8
Page 11 of 37
Exercises
Measures of Location
Page 12 of 37
Exercises
Measures of Dispersion
Page 13 of 37
Exercises
Page 14 of 37
Exercises
Page 15 of 37
Exercises
Counting
8.1
1. Say the only clean clothes Clint has are 2 shirts and 3 pairs of jeans. How many different ways
can Clint dress up with a shirt and a pair of jeans?
2. In a class of 7 students, four are to be chosen to sit in a row for a picture. How many linear
arrangements are possible?
3. A newborn male child may be given one (such as John) or two (such as John Patrick) names.
Assuming that the name will not be repeated (that is, no child may be named John John), if there
are 150 names to choose from, in how many ways can a child be named?
4. How many different 4-digit numbers can be formed from the digits 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 if:
(a) repetition is not allowed? How many of these numbers are even? How many are these
numbers are odd?
(b) repetition is allowed?
5. A test consists of 15 multiple choice questions, with each question having four possible answers.
In how many different ways can a student check off one answer to each question?
6. Three-digit numbers are formed using the digits 2, 4, 5, and 9, without repetition of digits. How
many such numbers can be formed if the numbers are divisible by 5?
7. Suppose a code consists of two letters followed by a digit. Find the number of:
(a) codes.
(b) codes with distinct letters.
(c) codes with the same letters.
8. Three cards are chosen in in succession from a deck with 52 cards. Find the number of ways this
can be done:
(a) with replacement.
(b) without replacement.
9. Michael will draw two cards successively from a standard deck of playing cards.
(a) With replacement, how many ways can he choose:
i. 2 kings.
ii. a red card and a spade.
iii. 2 queens or 2 aces.
(b) Without replacement, how many ways can he choose:
i. 2 kings.
Prepared by: Celine Sarmiento
Page 16 of 37
Exercises
Page 17 of 37
8.2
Exercises
1. Four mathematics books and three chemistry books are to be placed on a shelf. In how many
ways can this be done if the mathematics books are next to each other and the chemistry books
are next to each other?
2. From a group of 8 men and 5 women a committee of 4 people is to be formed. In how many ways
can this be done if the committee must contain at least 1 woman?
3. In how many ways can 5 people line up for a group picture if:
(a) two want to stand next to each other?
(b) two refuse to stand next to each other?
4. In how many ways can 5 girls and 3 boys be arranged in a row without restriction? such that the
3 boys are together? such that all the girls are together and all the boys are together?
5. How many ways can 3 blue, 4 red and 2 green identical bulbs be arranged in a string of Christmas
tree lights with 9 sockets?
6. Eight persons, consisting of 4 married couples are to be seated in a row of 8 chairs. How many
sitting arrangements are there if there are no restrictions? the women must sit together? then
men must sit together and the women must sit together? each married couple must sit together?
7. From a bag containing 7 black balls and 5 white balls, how many sets of 5 balls, of which 3 are
black and 2 are white, can be drawn?
8. During a JS Prom Night, 10 boys and 8 girls were nominated for the Prince and Princess of Hearts.
How many ways can a Prince, a Princess, and a Princesss court of two girls can be selected?
9. Blues Pizza Palace sells plain pizza or with one or more of the following toppings: pepperoni,
sausage, mushroom, or pineapple. How many different pizzas can be made?
10. Find the number of permutations that can be formed from all the letters of each word:
(a) BASIC
(b) STATISTICS
(c) MATHEMATICS
(d) PROBABILITY
(e) PHILIPPINES
11. A railway coach has 12 seats facing backwards and 12 seats facing forwards. In how many ways
can 10 passengers be seated if 2 refuse to face forwards and 4 refuse to face backwards?
12. Find the number of ways 12 students can be partitioned in to three teams: A, B, C so that each
team contains four students.
13. A box contains 7 blue socks and 5 red socks. Find the number of ways two socks can be drawn
from the box if:
(a) they can be any color.
Prepared by: Celine Sarmiento
Page 18 of 37
Exercises
Page 19 of 37
Exercises
Probability
Read, analyze and solve each problem carefully. Express your answers as fractions in simplest form or
as decimals rounded to four significant digits.
1. A spinner has 5 equal sectors colored orange, red, green, blue and white. What is the probability
of landing on green after spinning the spinner?
2. A single 6-sided fair die is rolled. What is the probability that the number on top is an odd
number?
3. A glass jar contains 7 red, 5 orange, 6 pink and 4 violet marbles. If a single marble is chosen at
random from the jar, what is the probability of choosing a violet marble?
4. A coin is tossed twice. What is the probability that at most one tail occurs?
5. A glass jar contains 7 red, 5 orange, 6 pink and 4 violet marbles. If a single marble is chosen at
random from the jar, what is the probability of choosing a marble that is NOT violet?
6. In a group of 110 engineering students, 27 are taking up BS Electronics and Communications
Engineering (ECE) and 31 are taking up BS Civil Engineering (CE). Find the probability that a
student picked from this group at random is either an ECE OR CE student.
7. If a card is drawn at random from an ordinary deck of 52 cards, find the probability that it is a
flower or an odd numbered card.
8. The probability that a patient entering St. Lukes Hospital will consult a physician in 0.7, that
he/she will consult a dentist is 0.5 and that he/she will consult a physician or a dentist or both
is 0.9. What is the probability that a patient entering the hospital will consult both a physician
and a dentist?
9. Suppose you roll a pair of dice, a blue one and a green one. What is the probability that the sum
is 9 given that the blue die shows the number 5?
Page 20 of 37
Exercises
10. A certain airplane has two independent alternators to provide electrical power. The probability
that a given alternator will work on a 1-hour flight is 0.89. What is the probability that on a
1-hour flight:
(a) both will work?
(b) both will not work?
(c) one will work and the other will not?
11. From the integers from 1 to 40 inclusive, one integer is selected at random. What is the probability
that it is:
(a) a perfect square.
(b) a prime number.
(c) a multiple of 9.
(d) a perfect square or composite.
(e) a perfect square or not a multiple of 2.
12. If two cards are dealt from a standard 52-card deck successively, without replacement, what is the
probability that both are diamonds?
13. Four radar sets, operating independently, are set to detect any aircraft flying through a certain
area. Each set has a probability of 0.032 of failing to detect a plane. If an aircraft enters the area,
what is the probability that it goes undetected?
14. Suppose we have a box containing 25 flashlight bulbs, of which 8 are defective. If three bulbs are
selected at random and removed from the box in succession without replacing the first, what is
the probability that the first 2 are working properly and the third one is defective?
15. The table below shows the distribution of 350 engineering students of a particular university
according to their specialization and their gender.
Specialization
Electrical Engineering
Civil Engineering
Electronics and Communications Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Industrial Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Male
43
56
49
39
34
43
Female
12
20
18
5
9
22
Page 21 of 37
Exercises
(f) what is the probability that the students is a male or not taking electrical engineering nor
electronics and communications engineering?
(g) what is probability that the student is a female and taking electrical engineering?
(h) what is the probability that the students is a female and taking civil engineering or a male
and taking industrial engineering?
16. A community swim team has 170 members. Eighty two (82) of the members are advanced swimmers. Thirty eight (38) of the members are intermediate swimmers. The remainder are novice
swimmers. Fifty six (56) of the advanced swimmers practice 5 times a week. Twenty three (23) of
the intermediate swimmers practice 5 times a week.Twelve (12) of the novice swimmers practice
5 times a week. Suppose one member of the swim team is randomly chosen.
(a) What is the probability that the member is a novice swimmer?
(b) What is the probability that the member practices 5 times a week?
(c) What is the probability that the member is an advanced swimmer and practices 5 times a
week?
17. A bag contains 180 balls that are either pink or purple and either dull or shiny. There are 45 shiny
pink balls, 70 shiny balls, and 62 pink balls. If a ball is chosen at random, what is the probability
that it is either a shiny ball or a pink ball? What is the probability that it is a dull purple ball?
18. A jar contains 19 green marbles numbered 1 to 19, and 35 white marbles numbered 1 to 35.
A marble is drawn at random from the jar. Find the probability that the marble is white or
even-numbered.
19. Urn A contains seven blue chips and six yellow chips; Urn B contains five blue and seven yellow
chips. Two chips are drawn simultaneously from Urn A and placed in Urn B. Then a single chip
is drawn from Urn B. What is the probability that the chip drawn from Urn B is blue?
Page 22 of 37
10
Exercises
Bayes Theorem
Read, analyze and solve each problem carefully. Express your answers as fractions in simplest form or
as decimals rounded to four significant digits.
1. In a study of pleas and prison sentences, it is found that 45% of the subjects studied were sent to
prison. Among those sent to prison, 40% chose to plead guilty. Among those not sent to prison,
60% chose to plead guilty.
(a) If one of the study subjects is randomly selected, find the probability of getting someone who
was sent to prison.
(b) If one of the study subjects is randomly selected, find the probability of getting someone who
was NOT sent to prison.
(c) If a study is randomly selected and it is then found that the subject entered a guilty plea,
find the probability that this person was sent to prison.
(d) If a study is randomly selected and it is then found that the subject entered a guilty plea,
find the probability that this person was NOT sent to prison.
2. Small cars get better mileage, but they are not as safe as bigger cars. Small cars accounted for
18% of the vehicles on the road, but accidents involving small cars led to 11,898 fatalities during
the recent year (Readers Digest, May 2000). Assume the probability a small car is involved in an
accident is 0.18. The probability of an accident involving a small car leading to fatality is 0.128
and the probability of an accident not involving a small car leading to fatality is 0.05. Use the
following notations:
S = a small car is involved in an accident
S 0 = NOT a small car involved in an accident
F = the accident lead to fatality
Determine the following:
(a) What is the probability that a small car was involved in an accident?
(b) What is the probability that NOT a small car was involved in an accident?
(c) If a small car was involved, what is the probability that the accident lead to fatality?
(d) If a small car was NOT involved, what is the probability that the accident lead to fatality?
(e) Suppose you learn of an accident involving a fatality, what is the probability that a small car
was involved?
3. A student answers a multiple choice examination question that has 4 possible answers. Suppose
that the probability that the student knows the answer to the question is 0.80 and the probability
that the student guesses is 0.20. If the student guesses, the probability of getting the correct
answer is 0.25. If it is answered correctly, what is the probability that the student really knew the
correct answer?
Page 23 of 37
Exercises
4. Two masked robbers try to rob a bank but the teller presses a button that sets off an alarm and
locks all the doors. The robbers realizing they are trapped, throw away their masks and disappear
into the chaotic crowd. Confronted with 53 people claiming they are innocent, the police gives
everyone a lie detector test. Suppose that guilty people are detected with probability 0.85 and
innocent people appear to be guilty with probability 0.08. What is the probability that Mr. Santos
was one of the robbers given that the lie detector says he is?
Page 24 of 37
11
Exercises
Page 25 of 37
Exercises
10. Determine the value of c so that the function f (x) = c(x2 + 4) for x = {0, 1, 2, 3} can serve a
probability distribution of the discrete random variable X.
11. Repair costs for a particular machine are represented by the following probability distribution:
$50
x
f (x) 0.30
$200
0.20
$350
0.50
0
0.41
1
0.37
2
0.16
3
0.05
4
0.01
Page 26 of 37
12
Exercises
Read, analyze and solve each problem carefully. Express your answers as fractions in simplest form or
as decimals rounded to four significant digits.
12.1
Binomial Distribution
1. The probability that a certain kind of component will survive a given shock test is 3/4. Find the
probability that exactly 2 of the next 4 components tested survive.
2. The probability that a log-on to the network is successful is 0.87. Ten users attempt to log on
independently. Find the probability that between 4 and 8 log-ons are successful.
3. The probability that a patient recovers from a rare blood disease is 0.40. If 15 people are known
to have contracted this disease, what is the probability that
(a) at least 10 survive?
(b) from 3 to 8 survive?
(c) exactly 5 survive?
12.2
1. An oil company conducts a geological study that indicates that an exploratory oil well should have
a 20% chance of striking oil. What is the probability that the third strike comes on the seventh
well drilled?
2. It is reported that 10% of the apples from the Apple Farm are bad. If apples are randomly selected
from this farm one after another, what is the probability that the 10th apple selected will be the
2nd bad apple selected?
3. In an NBA championship series, the team which wins four games out of seven will be the winner.
Suppose that team A has probability 0.55 of winning over team B and both teams A and B face
each other in the championship games.
(a) What is the probability that team A will win the series in six games?
(b) What is the probability that team A will win the series?
12.3
Geometric Distribution
1. When taping a TV commercial, the probability that a certain actor will get his lines straight on
any one take is 0.40. What is the probability that this actor will get his lines straight for the first
time on the fourth take?
2. Find the probability that a person flipping a balanced coin requires 4 tosses to get a head.
3. The probability that any given person will believe a rumor about the private life of a certain
politician is 0.25. What is the probability that the fifth person to hear the rumor will be the first
one to believe it?
Page 27 of 37
Exercises
4. Find the probability that a person drawing a single card with replacement from a standard deck
requires 6 draws to get a face card.
12.4
Poisson Distribution
1. The average number of traffic accidents on a certain section of highway is two per week. Assume
that the number of accidents follow a Poisson distribution with = 2.
(a) Find the probability of no accidents on this section of highway during a 1-week period.
(b) Find the probability of at most three accidents on this section of highway during a week
period.
2. The average number of monthly breakdowns of a computer is 1.8. Find the probabilities that this
computer will function for a month:
(a) without a breakdown.
(b) with only one breakdown.
3. On the average, 8 people per hour use an express teller machine situated inside a commercial
complex every afternoon. What is the probability that, during a selected Friday afternoon,
(a) exactly 6 people will use the teller machine?
(b) at least 4 people will use the machine?
12.5
Hypergeometric Distribution
1. A carton contains 24 light bulbs, three of which are defective. What is the probability that, if a
sample of six is chosen at random from the carton of bulbs, 4 will not be defective?
2. Find the probability of getting 4 face cards if a hand of 10 cards is drawn from a standard deck
of cards without replacement.
3. A customs inspector decides to inspect 3 of 16 shipments that arrive from Madrid by plane. If
the selection is random and 5 of the shipments contain contraband, find the probabilities that the
customs inspector will catch:
(a) none of the shipments with contraband;
(b) one of the shipments with contraband;
(c) two of the shipments with contraband;
(d) three of the shipments with contraband.
Page 28 of 37
13
Exercises
Read, analyze and solve each problem carefully. Express your answers as fractions in simplest form or
as decimals rounded to four significant digits.
13.1
Normal Distribution
Page 29 of 37
Exercises
7. The tensile strength of a certain metal component is normally distributed with mean of 10,000
kilogram per square centimeter and a standard deviation of 100 kilograms per square centimeter.
Measurements are recorded to the nearest 50 kilograms per square meter.
(a) What proportion of these components exceeds 10,150 per square centimeter in tensile strength?
(b) If specifications require that all components have tensile strength between 9,800 and 10,200
kilograms per square centimeter inclusive, what proportion of pieces would you expect to
scrap?
8. Anna Lincoln has been the production manager of Medical Suppliers Inc., for the past 17 years.
Medical Suppliers Inc., is a producer of bandages and arm slings. During the past 5 years, the
demand of No-Stick bandages has been fairly constant. On the average, sales have been about
87,000 packages of No-Stick. Susan has reason to believe that the distribution of No-Stick following
a normal curve, with a standard deviation of 4,000 packages. What is the probability that sales
will be less than 81,000 packages?
13.2
Exponential Distribution
1. The time between arrivals of cars at Als full-service gas pump follows an exponential probability
distribution with a mean time between arrivals of 3 minutes. Al would like to know the probability
that the time between two successive arrivals will be 2 minutes or less.
2. A pumping station operator observes that the demand for water at a certain hour of the day can
be modelled as an exponential random variable with a mean of 100 cfs (cubic feet per second).
Find the probability that the demand will exceed 200 cfs on a randomly selected day.
3. Assume that the time required to download a file from the Internet is exponentially distributed
with mean equal to 4 minutes. What is the probability that a download will require at least 2 but
not more than 4 minutes?
4. Jobs are sent to a printer at an average of 3 jobs per hour.
(a) What is the expected time between jobs?
(b) What is the probability that the next job is sent within 5 minutes?
5. Suppose that the amount of time one spends in a bank is exponentially distributed with mean 10
minutes. What is the probability that a customer will spend more than 15 minutes in the bank?
6. Suppose the mean time between failures (MTBF) for a certain electronic component is 2,400 hours.
(a) What is the probability that an electronic component will exceed 4,000 before failing?
(b) What is the probability that an electronic component will fail before 1,800 hours?
(c) Determine the interval of such time that the probability of at least one failure is 50%.
(d) Determine the interval of such time that the probability of no failures is 25%.
7. The length of life of a certain type of electronic tube is exponentially distributed with a mean life
of 500 hours.
(a) Find the probability that a tube will last more than 800 hours.
Prepared by: Celine Sarmiento
Page 30 of 37
Exercises
(b) Find the probability that a tube will fail within the first 200 hours.
(c) Find the probability that the length of life of a tube will be between 400 and 700 hours.
Page 31 of 37
14
Exercises
Estimation
14.1
Estimation of Means
1. An electrical firm manufactures light bulbs that have a length life that is approximately normally
distributed with a standard deviation of 40 hours.
(a) If a sample of 30 bulbs has an average life of 780 hours, find a 96% confidence interval for
the population mean of all bulbs produced by this firm.
(b) How large sample is needed if we wish to be 96% confident that our sample mean will be
within 10 hours of the true mean?
2. A survey of the delivery time of 100 orders worth Php 20,000 from SHK Pizza yielded a mean of
55 minutes with a standard deviation of 12 minutes. Assuming that the delivery time follows a
normal distribution, construct a 95% confidence interval for the true mean.
3. The heights of a random sample of 50 college students showed a mean of 174.5 cm and a standard
deviation of 6.9 cm. What can we assert with 98% confidence about the possible size of our error
if we estimate the mean height of all college students to be 174.5?
4. The monthly wage of new employees at a certain broadcasting company is said to follow a normal
distribution with a standard deviation of Php 1,000. How large sample be needed to be 99%
confident that the sample mean will be within Php 300 of the true mean.
5. A random sample of 100 automobile owners shows that, in the state of Virginia, an automobile is
driven on the average 23,500 kilometers per year with standard deviation of 3,900 kilometers.
(a) What can we assert with 99% confidence about the possible size of our error if we estimate
the average number of kilometers driven by car owners in Virginia to be 23,500 kilometers
per year?
(b) Construct a 99% confidence interval for the average number of kilometers an automobile is
driven in Virginia.
6. A random sample of 8 cigarettes of a certain brand has average nicotine content of 3.6 milligrams
and a standard deviation of 0.9 milligrams. Construct a 99% confidence interval for the true
average nicotine content of this particular brand of cigarettes, assuming an approximate normal
distribution.
7. The mean and standard deviation for the quality grade point average of a random sample of 38
college seniors are calculated to be 2.7 and 0.3, respectively. Find the 95% confidence interval for
the mean of the entire senior class.
8. In a study of the use of hypnosis to relieve pain, sensory ratings were measured for 1% subjects,
with the results given below. Construct a 95% confidence interval for the true mean sensory
ratings for all subjects.
8.8
6.2
7.7
6.4
6.1
6.8
9.8
8.2
8.5
7.3
7.1
6.0
6.2
5.9
9.4
Page 32 of 37
Exercises
9. A machine is producing metal pieces that are cylindrical in shape. A sample of pieces is taken and
the diameters are 1.01, 0.97, 1.03, 1.04, 0.99, 0.98, 0.99, 1.01, and 1.03 centimeters. Find a 99%
confidence interval for the mean diameter of pieces from this machine, assuming an approximate
normal distribution.
14.2
Estimation of Proportion
1. In a random sample of n = 500 families owning television sets in the city of Hamilton, Canada, it
is found that x = 340 subscribed to HBO.
(a) Find a 95% confidence interval for the actual proportion of families in this city who subscribe
to HBO.
(b) How large sample is required if we want 95% confident that our estimate of p is within 0.02?
(c) How large sample is required if we want to be at least 95% confident that our estimate of p
is within 0.02?
2. A manufacturer of compact disk players uses a set of comprehensive tests to access the electrical
function of its product. All compact disk players must pass all tests prior to being sold. A random
sample of 500 disk players resulted in 15 failing one or more tests. Find a 90% confidence interval
for the proportion of compact disk players from the population that pass all tests.
3. A study is to be made to estimate to percentage of citizens in a town who favor having their water
fluoridated. How large a sample is needed if one wishes to be at least 95% confident that our
estimate is within 1% of the true percentage?
4. A sample of 81 college students finds that 27 attend 3 or more fun games each summer. Find a
95% confidence interval for the true population proportion of KSU students that attend 3 or more
Braves games each summer.
5. A random sample of 140 college students finds that 113 of those students polled avoid classes that
start before 9:30 AM. Construct a 99% confidence interval for the true population proportion of
students who avoid classes that start before 9:30 AM.
6. In a random sample of 1,000 homes in a certain city, it is found that 228 are heated by oil. Find
the 99% confidence interval for the proportion of homes in this city that are heated by oil.
7. Compute a 98% confidence interval for the proportion of defective items in a process when it is
found that a sample of 100 yields 8 defectives.
8. A national electronics chain wishes to estimate the percentage of its customers who would pay a
yearly membership fee in order to receive a 15% discount on all purchases of books, CDs, DVDs,
games and software. Find the sample size needed to ensure that the sample estimate differs from
the true population percentage by no more than 2.5%. Test at 95% confidence.
9. A study is to be made to estimate the proportion of residents in a certain city and its suburbs
who favor the construction of a nuclear power plant. How large a sample is needed if one wishes
to be at least 95% confident that the estimate is within 0.04 of the true proportion of residents in
this city and its suburbs that favor the construction of the nuclear power plant?
Page 33 of 37
15
Exercises
Hypothesis Testing
Read and analyze each problem carefully. Perform a complete hypothesis testing for each item.
15.1
1. A researcher reports that the average salary of assistant professors is more than $42,000. A sample
of 30 assistant professors has a mean salary of $43,260. At = 0.05, test the claim that assistant
professors earn more than $42,000 a year. The standard deviation of the population is $5230.
2. A random sample of 100 recorded deaths in the United States during the past year showed an
average life span of 71.8 years. Assuming a population standard deviation of 8.9 years, does
this seem to indicate that the mean life span today is greater than 70 years? Use 0.05 level of
significance.
3. The mean weight of the baggage carried into an airplane by individual passengers at Roxas City
Airport is 19.8 kilograms. A statistician takes a random sample of 110 passengers and obtains a
sample mean weight of 18.5 kilograms with standard deviation of 8.5 kilograms. Test the claim
at = 0.01 level of significance.
4. A national magazine claims that the average college student watches less television than the
general public. The national average is 29.4 hours per week, with a standard deviation of 2 hours.
A sample of 20 college students has a mean of 27 hours. Is there enough evidence to support the
claim at = 0.01?
5. A job placement director claims that the average starting salary for nurses is $24,000. A sample
of 10 nurses has a mean of $23,450 and a standard deviation of $400. Is there enough evidence to
reject the directors claim at = 0.05?
6. According to the Department of Education, high school teachers work an average of 40 hours
per week during the school year. A district supervisor of a certain schools surveyed 28 randomly
selected teachers and found that they work an average of 42.6 hours a week and the standard
deviation was 3.75 hours. Test if the mean number of hours worked by teachers in the supervisors
school district differs from the national average. Use = 0.01.
15.2
1. An agronomist randomly selected 20 matured calamansi trees of one variety and have a mean
height of 10.8 feet with standard deviation of 1.25 feet, while 12 randomly selected calamansi
trees of another variety have a mean height of 9.6 feet with standard deviation of 1.45 feet. Test
whether the difference between the two sample means is significant. Use = 0.05.
2. To compare freshmens knowledge of mathematics in two departments of the College of Business
Administration, a certain professor in Statistics got a sample of economics and accountancy students and gave them special examination. A sample of 25 economics major students had a mean
score of 85.85 with standard deviation of 7.5. A sample of 28 accounting major students had a
mean score of 90.5 with a standard deviation of 10.3. Is there a significant difference between the
two sample means? Use 0.05 level of significance.
Page 34 of 37
Exercises
3. The daily sales of two newspaper vendors were recorded on a random basis. The result of two
samples are as follows:
Vendor I: Php 108, Php 125, Php 130, Php 116, Php 120, Php 119
Vendor II: Php 113, Php 120, Php 120, Php 110, Php 125, Php 120
Is there a significant difference between the mean sales of the two newspaper vendors? Test at
0.01 significance level.
Page 35 of 37
16
Exercises
G
H
I
J
121 142 100 126
129 131 96 113
77
82
50
66
71
78
72
34
81
47
94
85
96
99
99
99
67
68
10
75
20
136
30
210
40
291
50
368
60
441
70
519
80
588
Page 36 of 37
Exercises
i. 65 lines
ii. 100 lines
iii. 1,000 lines
References:
Altares, P., et. al. (2013). Elementary Statistics with Computer Applications (2nd Edition). Rex
Printing Company, Inc., Quezon City.
Mendenhall, W., et. al. (1999). Introduction to Probability and Statistics. Brooks/Cole Publishing
Company, USA.
Reyes, C. and Saren, L. (2003). Elementary Statistics. National Bookstore, Mandaluyong City.
Walpole, R., et. al. (2005). Probability and Statistics for Engineers and Scientists (7th Edition).
Pearson Education, Inc., New Jersey.
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