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Brase & Brase - Understanding Basic Statistics 7/e (Homework)

James Finch

Statistics, section 2, Fall 2019

Instructor: Dr. Friendly

Current Score : 29 / 74

Due : Sunday, January 27, 2030 23:30 EST

Last Saved : n/a Saving...  ()

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29/74 (39.2%)
  • Instructions

    Understanding Basic Statistics, 7th edition by Charles Brase and Corrinne Pellillo Brase, published by Cengage Learning, offers instructors an effective way to teach the essentials of statistics, including early coverage of regression, within a more limited time frame. The Seventh Edition addresses the growing importance of developing students' critical thinking and statistical literacy skills with critical thinking features and new exercises throughout the text. The WebAssign component of this text engages students with immediate feedback, lecture videos, and a complete eBook.

    All questions have Read Its.

    Question 1 is multipart.

    Question 3 has a tree diagram (waplots).

    Question 5 uses mathPad.

    Question 6 is a Stats in Practice Question that demonstrates the use of videos displayed within a question, followed by multiple-choice and discussion questions in a unique two-part accordion-style type of display.

    Question 7 is a Test Bank question that highlights the ability to grade short answer style questions automatically using multiple choice.

    Question 8 is a Simulation Question utilizing the JMP Applet.

    Question 9 is an example of a Statistical Lab.

    Question 10 highlights Milestone 1, the first step in presenting and tracking Project Milestones for a statistical research project.

    View the complete list of WebAssign questions available for this textbook. This demo assignment allows many submissions and allows you to try another version of the same question for practice wherever the problem has randomized values.

Assignment Submission

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1. /15 points BBBasicStat7 5.1.022. My Notes
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/15
 
Betting odds are usually stated against the event happening (against winning).
The odds against event W are the ratio
P(not W)
P(W)
 = 
P(Wc)
P(W)
.
In horse racing, the betting odds are based on the probability that the horse does not win.
(a) Show that if we are given the odds against an event W as a:b, the probability of not W is given by
P(Wc) = 
a
a + b
.
P(W) =  P(not W)
 
P(not W)
P(W)
 = 
a
 
P(not W)
P(not W)
 = 
a
b[P(not W)] =  [1 P(not W)]
b[P(not W)] + a[P(not W)] = 
(a + b)[P(not W)] = 
P(not W) = 
a +

(b) In a recent Kentucky Derby, the betting odds for the favorite horse were 8 to 5. Use these odds to compute the probability that the favorite horse would lose the race. What is the probability that the favorite horse would win the race? (Round your answers to two decimal places.)
P(lose) =
P(win) =

(c) In the same race, the betting odds for a second horse were 3 to 1. Use these odds to estimate the probability that this horse would lose the race. What is the probability that this horse would win the race? (Round your answers to two decimal places.)
P(lose) =
P(win) =

(d) One of the horses was a long shot, with betting odds of 25 to 1. Use these odds to estimate the probability that the long shot would lose the race. What is the probability the horse would win the race? (Round your answers to two decimal places.)
P(lose) =
P(win) =
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2. /4 points BBBasicStat7 5.2.022. My Notes
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/4
 
You draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards without replacing the first one before drawing the second.
(a) Are the outcomes on the two cards independent? Why?
    

(b) Find P(3 on 1st card and 10 on 2nd). (Enter your answer as a fraction.)


(c) Find P(10 on 1st card and 3 on 2nd). (Enter your answer as a fraction.)


(d) Find the probability of drawing a 10 and a 3 in either order. (Enter your answer as a fraction.)
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/3
 
Consider the following.
(a) Draw a tree diagram to display all the possible outcomes that can occur when you flip a coin and then toss a die.



(b) How many outcomes contain a head and a number greater than 4?


(c) Probability extension: Assuming the outcomes displayed in the tree diagram are all equally likely, what is the probability that you will get a head and a number greater than 4 when you flip a coin and toss a die? (Use 3 decimal places.)
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/3
 
The qualified applicant pool for three management trainee positions consists of six women and six men.
(a) How many different groups of applicants can be selected for the positions?


(b) How many different groups of trainees would consist entirely of women?


(c) Probability extension: If the applicants are equally qualified and the trainee positions are selected by drawing the names at random so that all groups of three are equally likely, what is the probability that the trainee class will consist entirely of women? (Round your answer to four decimal places.)
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5. /10 points BBBasicStat7 6.3.023. My Notes
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/10
 
On the leeward side of the island of Oahu, in the small village of Nanakuli, about 71% of the residents are of Hawaiian ancestry. Let n = 1, 2, 3, ... represent the number of people you must meet until you encounter the first person of Hawaiian ancestry in the village of Nanakuli.
(a) Write out a formula for the probability distribution of the random variable n. (Use p and n in your answer.)
P(n) =


(b) Compute the probabilities that n = 1, n = 2, and n = 3. (Use 3 decimal places.)
P(1)
P(2)
P(3)

(c) Compute the probability that n 4. (Use 3 decimal places.)


(d) In Waikiki, it is estimated that about 3% of the residents are of Hawaiian ancestry. Repeat parts (a), (b), and (c) for Waikiki. (Use 3 decimal places.)
(a) P(n) =


(b)P(1)
P(2)
P(3)

(c)
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/4
 

Stats in Practice

  • Part I - Multiple Choice Questions

    The video opens with: "Fewer young people are putting on sunscreen when they are having fun in the sun." They support this conclusion by citing the results of a Center for Disease (CDC) study, in which researchers estimated what value in both 2001 and 2011?
        
    In this CDC study, why is it correct to say that researchers "estimated" a particular population characteristic rather than say the researchers "calculated" that value?
        
    The video discusses a study conducted by University of Michigan researchers who found that "close community ties can reduce heart attack risk for those over 50." In this study, researchers probably collected a sample of individuals, and for each, measured numerical variables (such as age or weight) as well as categorical variables (such as gender or whether a person has had a heart attack). Which of the following is also a numerical variable that researchers may have measured in this study?
        
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7. /1 points BBBasicStat7 9.TB.028. My Notes
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A researcher is predicting that a treatment will increase scores. If this treatment is evaluated using a directional hypothesis test, then the critical region for the test would be the following.
    
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8. /7 points BBBasicStat7 4.JMP.004. My Notes
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Waiters at a restaurant want to know if there is a relationship between the amount they are given in tips and the amount of the meal. Here is the graph along with the output from the regression table (without the regression equation). Use the JMP applet to answer the questions below.
  • JMP Applet

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9. /9 points BBBasicStat7 2.Lab.001.Excel. My Notes
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Statistical Lab

  • Background

    The National Institutes of Health conducts ongoing surveys of US adults called the Health Information National Trends Survey (hereafter abbreviated HINTS).
    From the National Institutes of Health: "The HINTS data collection program was created to monitor changes in the rapidly evolving field of health communication. Survey researchers are using the data to understand how adults 18 years and older use different communication channels, including the Internet, to obtain vital health information for themselves and their loved ones...."
    The most recent round of data collection occurred over the course of September 2013November, 2013 in HINTS 4 Cycle 3. In this lab, you will be using a subset of the HINTS 4 Cycle 3 data to practice creating effective and informative graphical representations of data, which may include histograms and circle graphs.
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/18
 

Milestone 1: Research Design

  • Question 1

    What is your research question?
    Your research question should be based on a topic that interests you and that you can reasonably obtain data for. Try to make your research question as specific as possible. Form a research question about a population that you will be able to sample. Some examples of research questions are: "Are students at my college able to taste the difference between regular coffee and decaffeinated coffee?", "Does the GPA, age, and number of credits needed for graduation for juniors at my university differ between transfer students and non-transfer students?", "Have the new water rates in my water district changed residents' water usage habits?", and "Do recent graduates from the business department at my university get larger starting salaries on average if they have participated in a summer internship?"

    This answer has not been graded yet.

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