An advertising study interviewed six randomly selected people in each of two cities, recording each personâs level of preference for a new product (Table 10.7.9).
a. Is this a paired or an unpaired two-sample problem?
b. Find the average preference level for each city.
c. Find the standard error of the difference between these average preference levels. (Note that these are small samples.)
d. Find the 95% two-sided confidence interval for the mean difference in preference between these two cities (Green Bay minus Milwaukee).
e. Test whether the apparent difference in preference is significant at the 5% test level.
Table 10.7.9:
TABLE 10.7.9 Preference Levels for Six Individuals in Each of Two Cities Milwaukee Green Bay 3 4 5 1 4 1 3 3 2 2 4 2.
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> Using the donations database on the companion site, and using only people who made a donation in response to the current mailing, consider predicting the amount of a donation (named “Donation_D1” in the worksheet) from the indicator variable that tells i
> Using the donations database on the companion site, and using only people who made a donation in response to the current mailing, consider predicting the amount of a donation (named “Donation_D1” in the worksheet) from the median years of school complete
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> From Table 11.3.16, consider the daily production and the number of workers assigned for each of a series of days. a. Find the regression equation for predicting production from the number of workers. b. What is the estimated production amount attributab
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> Table11.3.15 compares short-term bond funds, showing the average maturity (in years until the fund’s bonds mature) and the rate of return as a percentage. a. Find the correlation between maturity and return and interpret it. b. Find the
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> Gaining visibility for your products can be expensive, and television advertising during the Super Bowl is a good example, with a cost of nearly $2 million for a 30-s message. This high cost is due, in part, to the large number of Super Bowl viewers. Tab
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> In the presidential election of 2000, a number of events occurred between the initial vote count of Nov.7 and the count as certified by the Florida Secretary of State following counting of absentee ballots, a machine recount, and a Florida Supreme Court
> Would it be better to multiply by the size of the frame used to select the random sample?
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