A study considered the question, "Are you a registered voter?" Accuracy of response was confirmed by a check of city voting records. Two methods of survey were used: a face-to-face interview and a telephone interview. A random sample of 92 people were asked the voter registration question face to face. Of those sampled, seventy-three respondents gave accurate answers (as verified by city records). Another random sample of 88 people were asked the same question during a telephone interview. Of those sampled, sixty-seven respondents gave accurate answers. Assume the samples are representative of the general population. A button hyperlink to the SALT program that reads: Use SALT. (a) Categorize the problem below according to parameter being estimated, proportion p, mean μ, difference of means μ1 – μ2, or difference of proportions p1 – p2. Then solve the problem. p1 – p2 p     μ μ1 – μ2     (b) Let p1 be the population proportion of all people who answer the voter registration question accurately during a face-to-face interview. Let p2 be the population proportion of all people who answer the question accurately during a telephone interview. Find a 90% confidence interval for p1 – p2. (Use 3 decimal places.) lower limit  upper limit  (c) Does the interval contain numbers that are all positive? all negative? mixed? Comment on the meaning of the confidence interval in the context of this problem. At the 90% level, do you detect any difference in the proportion of accurate responses from face-to-face interviews compared with the proportion of accurate responses from telephone interviews? Because the interval contains only positive numbers, we can say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in face-to-face interviews. Because the interval contains both positive and negative numbers, we can not say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in face-to-face interviews.     We can not make any conclusions using this confidence interval. Because the interval contains only negative numbers, we can say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in telephone interviews

Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition 2012
1st Edition
ISBN:9780547587776
Author:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Publisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Chapter11: Data Analysis And Probability
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A study considered the question, "Are you a registered voter?" Accuracy of response was confirmed by a check of city voting records. Two methods of survey were used: a face-to-face interview and a telephone interview. A random sample of 92 people were asked the voter registration question face to face. Of those sampled, seventy-three respondents gave accurate answers (as verified by city records). Another random sample of 88 people were asked the same question during a telephone interview. Of those sampled, sixty-seven respondents gave accurate answers. Assume the samples are representative of the general population.

A button hyperlink to the SALT program that reads: Use SALT.

(a) Categorize the problem below according to parameter being estimated, proportion p, mean μ, difference of means μ1 – μ2, or difference of proportions p1 – p2. Then solve the problem.

p1 – p2

p    

μ

μ1 – μ2

 

 

(b) Let p1 be the population proportion of all people who answer the voter registration question accurately during a face-to-face interview. Let p2 be the population proportion of all people who answer the question accurately during a telephone interview. Find a 90% confidence interval for p1 – p2. (Use 3 decimal places.)

lower limit 

upper limit 

(c) Does the interval contain numbers that are all positive? all negative? mixed? Comment on the meaning of the confidence interval in the context of this problem. At the 90% level, do you detect any difference in the proportion of accurate responses from face-to-face interviews compared with the proportion of accurate responses from telephone interviews?

Because the interval contains only positive numbers, we can say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in face-to-face interviews.

Because the interval contains both positive and negative numbers, we can not say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in face-to-face interviews.    

We can not make any conclusions using this confidence interval.

Because the interval contains only negative numbers, we can say that there is a higher proportion of accurate responses in telephone interviews.

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