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Brase & Brase - Understandable Statistics 11/e (Homework)

James Finch

Statistics, section 2, Fall 2019

Instructor: Dr. Friendly

Current Score : 10 / 62

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

Last Saved : n/a Saving...  ()

Question
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
2/3 1/1 5/6 1/3 1/5 –/5 –/4 –/1 –/7 –/9 –/18
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10/62 (16.1%)
  • Instructions

    Create your course assignments by selecting questions from our bank of end-of-section exercises.

    Students can view and hear additional instruction through the 2-5 minute Watch It links. Students will also find helpful links to online excerpts from their textbook, tutorials, and videos.

    Every problem includes a link to the appropriate section of a complete interactive eBook, (also available through a dynamic table of contents from the student's WebAssign homepage), allowing students to highlight and take notes as they read.

    Read It - relevant textbook pages

    Watch It - videos of worked examples

    In this assignment we present several textbook question types found in Understandable Statistics: Concepts and Methods 11/e by Charles Henry Brase and Corinne Pellillo Brase, published by Cengage Learning, along with examples of the following additional stats content questions.

    Question 7 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 8 is a Test Bank question that highlights the ability to grade short answer style questions automatically using multiple choice.

    Question 9 is a Simulation Question utilizing the JMP Applet.

    Question 10 is an example of a Statistical Lab.

    Question 11 highlights Milestone 1, the first step in presenting and tracking Project Milestones for a statistical research project.

    Click here for a list of all of the questions coded in WebAssign. 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

For this assignment, you submit answers by question parts. The number of submissions remaining for each question part only changes if you submit or change the answer.

Assignment Scoring

Your last submission is used for your score.

1. 2/3 points  |  Previous Answers BBUnderStat11 5.1.009. My Notes
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2/3
 
We can use the random number table to simulate outcomes from a given discrete probability distribution. Jose plays basketball and has probability 0.7 of making a free-throw shot. Let x be the random variable that counts the number of successful shots out of 10 attempts. Consider the digits 0 through 9 of the random number table. Since Jose has a 70% chance of making a shot, assign the digits 0 through 6 to "making a basket from the free throw line" and the digits 7 through 9 to "missing the shot."
(a) Do 70% of the possible digits 0 through 9 represent "making a basket"?
     Correct: Your answer is correct.


(b) Start at line 2, column 1 of the random number table. Going across the row, determine the results of 10 "trials." How many free-throw shots are successful in this simulation?

(c) Your friend decides to assign the digits 0 through 2 to "missing the shot" and the digits 3 through 9 to "making the basket." Is this assignment valid? Explain.
     Correct: Your answer is correct.
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2. 1/1 points  |  Previous Answers BBUnderStat11 5.2.003. My Notes
Question Part
Points
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1
1/1
1/100
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1/1
 
For a binomial experiment, how many outcomes are possible for each trial? What are the possible outcomes?
     Correct: Your answer is correct.
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3. 5/6 points  |  Previous Answers BBUnderStat11 5.3.008. My Notes
Question Part
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1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 1/1 0/1
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5/6
 
The figures below show histograms of several binomial distributions with n = 6 trials. Match the given probability of success with the best graph.
(a) p = 0.30 goes with graph Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

II

.

(b) p = 0.50 goes with graph Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

I

.

(c) p = 0.65 goes with graph Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

III

.

(d) p = 0.90 goes with graph Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

IV

.

(e) In general, when the probability of success p is close to 0.5, would you say that the graph is more symmetrical or more skewed?
     Correct: Your answer is correct.

In general, when the probability of success p is close to 1, would you say that the graph is skewed to the right or to the left? What about when p is close to 0?
     Incorrect: Your answer is incorrect.
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4. 1/3 points  |  Previous Answers BBUnderStat11 5.3.022. My Notes
Question Part
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1/1 0/1 0/1
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1/3
 
The Denver Post reported that a recent Audit of Los Angeles 911 calls showed that 85% were not emergencies. Suppose the 911 operators in Los Angeles have just received four calls.
(a) What is the probability that all four calls are, in fact, emergencies? (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

0.001



(b) What is the probability that three or more calls are not emergencies? (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
Incorrect: Your answer is incorrect. seenKey

0.890



(c) How many calls n would the 911 operators need to answer to be 96% (or more) sure that at least one call is, in fact, an emergency?
Incorrect: Your answer is incorrect. seenKey

20

calls
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5. 1/5 points  |  Previous Answers BBUnderStat11 5.4.009. My Notes
Question Part
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/1 1/1 /1 /1 /1
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1/5
 
Susan is taking Western Civilization this semester on a pass/fail basis. The department teaching the course has a history of passing 85% of the students in Western Civilization each term. Let n = 1, 2, 3, ... represent the number of times a student takes Western Civilization until the first passing grade is received. (Assume the trials are independent.)
(a) Write out a formula for the probability distribution of the random variable n. (Use p and n in your answer.)
P(n) =


(b) What is the probability that Susan passes on the first try (n = 1)? (Use 2 decimal places.)
Correct: Your answer is correct. seenKey

0.85



(c) What is the probability that Susan first passes on the second try (n = 2)? (Use 3 decimal places.)


(d) What is the probability that Susan needs three or more tries to pass Western Civilization? (Use 3 decimal places.)


(e) What is the expected number of attempts at Western Civilization Susan must make to have her (first) pass? Hint: Use μ for the geometric distribution and round.
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6. /5 points BBUnderStat11 5.4.016. My Notes
Question Part
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1 2 3 4 5
/1 /1 /1 /1 /1
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/5
 
The Denver Post reported that, on average, a large shopping center had an incident of shoplifting caught by security 2.3 times every six hours. The shopping center is open from 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. (11 hours). Let r be the number of shoplifting incidents caught by security in an 11-hour period during which the center is open.
(a) Explain why the Poisson probability distribution would be a good choice for the random variable r.
    


What is λ? (Use 2 decimal places.)


(b) What is the probability that from 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. there will be at least one shoplifting incident caught by security? (Use 4 decimal places.)


(c) What is the probability that from 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. there will be at least three shoplifting incidents caught by security? (Use 4 decimal places.)


(d) What is the probability that from 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. there will be no shoplifting incidents caught by security? (Use 4 decimal places.)
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7. /4 points BBUnderStat11 7.SIP.501.XP. My Notes
Question Part
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1 2 3 4
/1 /1 /1 /1
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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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8. /1 points BBUnderStat11 8.TB.028. My Notes
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/1
 
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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9. /7 points BBUnderStat11 9.JMP.004. My Notes
Question Part
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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/7
 
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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10. /9 points BBUnderStat11 2.Lab.001.Excel. My Notes
Question Part
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
/1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1
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/9
 

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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11. /18 points BBUnderStat11 PJT.1.001. My Notes
Question Part
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
/1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1 /1
0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100 0/100
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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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