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Question: A champion archer can generally hit the


A champion archer can generally hit the bull-eye 80% of the time. Suppose she shoots 200 arrows during competition. Let p^ represent the percentage of bull-eyes she gets (the sample proportion).
1. What are the mean and standard deviation of the sampling distribution model for p^?
2. Is a Normal model appropriate here? Explain.
3. Sketch the sampling model, using the 68 95 99.7 Rule.
4. What the probability that she gets at least 85% bull-eyes?


> The study described in Exercise R6.21 also looked at scores in mathematics and language. Here are software outputs for the appropriate tests. Explain what they show. Mathematics T-TEST OF Mu(1) Mu(2)=0Mu(Cert) Mu(NoCert)=4.53t(86)=2.95p=0.002 Language T

> In 1974, the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia was the scene of an outbreak of what later became known as Legionnaires disease. The cause of the disease was finally discovered to be bacteria that thrived in the air-conditioning units of the hotel.

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> Corey has 4929 songs in his computer music library. The songs have a mean duration of 242.4 seconds with a standard deviation of 114.51 seconds. On the Nickel, by Tom Waits, is 380 seconds long. What is its z-score?

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> Among 242 Cleveland-area children born prematurely at low birthweights between 1977 and 1979, only 74% graduated from high school. Among a comparison group of 233 children of normal birthweight, 83% were high school graduates. (Outcomes in Young Adulthoo

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> We are sampling randomly from a distribution known to be bimodal. 1. As our sample size increases, what the expected shape of the sample distribution? 2. What the expected value of our sample mean? Does the size of the sample matter? 3. How is the variab

> Using a computer to play many simulated games of Scrabble, researcher Charles Robinove found that the letter A occurred in 54% of the hands. This study had a margin of error of ±10% (Chance, 15, no. 1 [2002]) 1. Explain what the margin of error means in

> In a survey of 1002 U.S. adults in December 2016 by Pew Research (www.journalism.org/2016/12/15/many-americans-believe-fake-news-is-sowing-confusion/), 64% of adult respondents say they think that made-up news is causing a great deal of confusion about t

> A high school senior uses the Internet to get information on February temperatures in the town where he’ll be going to college. He finds a website with some statistics, but they are given in degrees Celsius. The conversion formula is F=9/5 C+32. Determin

> The fastest horse in Kentucky Derby history was Secretariat in 1973. The scatterplot shows speed (in miles per hour) of the winning horses each year. What do you see? In most sporting events, performances have improved and continue to improve, so surely

> The 2016 U.S. presidential election was unusual in several ways. First, the candidate who won the most electoral votes, Donald Trump, did not win the most popular votes. Second, several minor-party candidates received enough votes to possibly affect the

> In a car rental company fleet, 70% of the cars are American brands, 20% are Japanese, and the rest are German. The company notes that manufacturers recalls seem to affect 2% of the American cars, but only 1% of the others. 1. What the probability that a

> How large are hamster litters? Among 47 golden hamster litters recorded, there were an average of 7.72 baby hamsters, with a standard deviation of 2.5 hamsters per litter. 1. Create and interpret a 90% confidence interval. 2. Would a 98% confidence inter

> We work for the Watchdog for the Consumer consumer advocacy group. We’ve been asked to look at a battery company that claims its batteries last an average of 100 hours under normal use. There have been several complaints that the batteries don’t last tha

> Every statement about a confidence interval contains two parts the level of confidence and the interval. Suppose that an insurance agent estimating the mean loss claimed by clients after home burglaries created the 95% confidence interval ($1644, $2391).

> As a project for an Introductory Statistics course, students checked 6 bags of Fritos marked with a net weight of 35.4 grams. They carefully weighed the contents of each bag, recording the following weights (in grams): 35.5, 35.3, 35.1, 36.4, 35.4, 35.5.

> Clarksburg Bakery is trying to predict how many loaves to bake. In the past 100 days, the bakery has sold between 95 and 140 loaves per day. Here are a histogram and the summary statistics for the number of loaves sold for the past 100 days. 1. Can you u

> In February 2012, MedPage Today reported that researchers used vemurafenib to treat metastatic melanoma (skin cancer). Out of 152 patients, 53% had a partial or complete response to vemurafenib. 1. Write a 95% confidence interval for the proportion helpe

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> In 2011, the Occupy Wall Street movement protested the concentration of wealth and power in the United States. A 2012 University of Delaware survey asked a random sample of 901 American adults whether they agreed or disagreed with the following statement

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> The advertising company described in Exercise R5.26 is thinking about signing a WNBA star to an endorsement deal. In its poll, 27% of the respondents could identify her. 1. Fans who never took statistics can’t understand why the company did not offer thi

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> A specialty foods company sells gourmet hams by mail order. The hams vary in size from 4.15 to 7.45 pounds, with a mean weight of 6 pounds and standard deviation of 0.65 pounds. The quartiles and median weights are 5.6, 6.2, and 6.55 pounds. 1. Find the

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> A computer company recently experienced a disastrous fire that ruined some of its inventory. Unfortunately, during the panic of the fire, some of the damaged computers were sent to another warehouse, where they were mixed with undamaged computers. The en

> Observers in Texas watched children at play in eight communities. Of the 814 children seen biking, roller skating, or skateboarding, only 14% wore a helmet. 1. Create and interpret an appropriate 95% confidence interval. 2. What concerns do you have abou

> An auto parts company advertises that its special oil additive will make the engine run smoother, cleaner, longer, with fewer repairs. An independent laboratory decides to test part of this claim. It arranges to have a taxicab company fleet of cars use t

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> The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 9.3% of surveyed high school students reported in 2015 that they had smoked cigarettes in the past 30 days. A college has 522 students in its freshman class. How likely is it that more than 10%

> The 2014 U.S. Religious Landscape Study interviewed more than 35,000 Americans from all 50 states about their beliefs and the role of religion in their lives. The fastest-growing group is the 22.8% who are Nones those who are not affiliated with any orga

> Neurological research has shown that in about 80% of people language abilities reside in the brain left side. Another 10% display right-brain language centers, and the remaining 10% have two-sided language control. (The latter two groups are mainly left-

> A Rutgers University study found that many high school students cheat on tests. The researchers surveyed a random sample of 4500 high school students nationwide; 74% of them said they had cheated at least once. 1. Create a 90% confidence interval for the

> Here are the summary statistics for the weekly payroll of a small company: lowest salary=$300, mean salary=$700, median=$500, range=$1200, IQR=$600, first quartile=$350, standard deviation=$400. 1. Do you think the distribution of salaries is symmetric,

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> One of the important issues for poultry farmers is the production rate the percentage of days on which a given hen actually lays an egg. Ideally, that would be 100% (an egg every day), but realistically, hens tend to lay eggs on about 3 of every 4 days.

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> The National Perinatal Statistics Unit of the Sydney Children Hospital reports that the mean birth weight of all babies born in birth centers in Australia in a recent year was 3564 grams about 7.86 pounds. A Missouri hospital reports that the average wei

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> A car owner may buy insurance that will pay the full price of repairing the car after an at-fault accident, or save $12 a year by getting a policy with a $500 deductible. Her insurance company says that about 0.5% of drivers in her area have an at-fault

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> Safety engineers must determine whether industrial workers can operate a machine emergency shutoff device. Among a group of test subjects, 66% were successful with their left hands, 82% with their right hands, and 51% with both hands. 1. What percent of

> The mean price of pizza in Baltimore was $2.85, $0.23 higher than the mean price of $2.62 in Dallas. To see if that difference was real, or due to chance, we took the 156 prices from Baltimore and Dallas and mixed those 312 prices together. Then we rando

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> Suppose that 70% of the women who suspect they may be pregnant and purchase an in-home pregnancy test are actually pregnant. Further suppose that the test is 98% accurate. What the probability that a woman whose test indicates that she is pregnant actual

> In a car rental company fleet, 70% of the cars are American brands, 20% are Japanese, and the rest are German. The company notes that manufacturers recalls seem to affect 2% of the American cars, but only 1% of the others. 1. What the probability that a

> In 1961 astronomer Frank Drake developed an equation to try to estimate the number of extraterrestrial civilizations in our galaxy that might be able to communicate with us via radio transmissions. Now largely accepted by the scientific community, the Dr

> A coin is to be tossed 36 times. 1. What are the mean and standard deviation of the number of heads? 2. Suppose the resulting number of heads is unusual, two standard deviations above the mean. How many extra heads were observed? 3. If the coin were toss

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> In your sock drawer you have 4 blue socks, 5 gray socks, and 3 black ones. Half asleep one morning, you grab 2 socks at random and put them on. Find the probability you end up wearing 1. 2 blue socks. 2. no gray socks. 3. at least 1 black sock. 4. a gree

> Almost every year, there is some incidence of volcanic activity on the island of Japan. In 2005 there were 5 volcanic episodes, defined as either eruptions or sizable seismic activity. Suppose the mean number of episodes is 2.4 per year. Let X be the num

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> Every 5 years the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences surveys college math departments. In 2000 the board reported that 51% of all undergraduates taking Calculus I were in classes that used graphing calculators and 31% were in classes that used

> Here another attempt at developing a good strategy for the dice game in Exercise 33 . Instead of stopping after a certain number of rolls, you could decide to stop when your score reaches a certain number of points. 1. How many points would you expect a

> When to stop In Exercise 27 of the Review Exercises for Part III, we posed this question: You play a game that involves rolling a die. You can roll as many times as you want, and your score is the total for all the rolls. But if you roll a 6, your score

> A Statistics professor comes home to find that all four of his children got white team shirts from soccer camp this year. He concludes that this year, unlike other years, the camp must not be using a variety of colors. But then he finds out that in each

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> Each year a company must send 3 officials to a meeting in China and 5 officials to a meeting in France. Airline ticket prices vary from time to time, but the company purchases all tickets for a country at the same price. Past experience has shown that ti

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> From Exercise 50 it appeared that the mean log fusion time for the VV group was greater than that of the NV group. Could the difference be due to chance? The histogram below shows the difference in the means of the log fusion times by randomly selecting

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> Given independent random variables with means and standard deviations as shown, find the mean and standard deviation of each of these variables: 1. X+50 2. 10Y 3. X+0.5Y 4. XY 5. X+Y

> Suppose that, as reported by the Centers for Disease Control, about 18% of high school students smoke tobacco. You randomly select 120 high school students to survey them on their attitudes toward scenes of smoking in the movies. 1. What the expected num

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> A company human resources officer reports a breakdown of employees by job type and sex shown in the table. 1. What the probability that a worker selected at random is 1. female? 2. female or a production worker? 3. female, if the person works in producti

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