Statistics for Engineers and Scientists - With Access
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781259275975
Author: Navidi
Publisher: MCG
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 1, Problem 19SE
The article “The Ball-on-Three-Ball Test for Tensile Strength: Refined Methodology and Results for Three Hohokam Ceramic Types” (M. Beck, American Antiquity, 2002:558–569) discusses the strength of ancient ceramics. Several specimens of each of three types of ceramic were tested. The loads (in kg) required to crack the specimens are as follows:
Ceramic Type | Loads (kg) |
Sacaton | 15, 30, 51, 20, 17, 19, 20, 32, 17, 15, 23, 19, 15, 18, 16, 22, 29, 15, 13, 15 |
Gila Plain | 27, 18, 28, 25, 55, 21, 18, 34, 23, 30, 20, 30, 31, 25, 28, 26, 17, 19, 16, 24, 19, 9, 31, 19, 27, 20, 43, 15 |
Casa Grande | 20, 16, 20, 36, 27, 35, 66, 15, 18, 24, 21, 30, 20, 24, 23, 21, 13, 21 |
- a. Construct comparative boxplots for the three samples.
- b. How many outliers does each sample contain?
- c. Comment on the features of the three samples.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A study of the properties of metal plate-connected trusses used for roof support yielded the following observations on axial stiffness index (kips/in.) for plate lengths 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 in:
4:
323.2
409.5
311.0
326.5
316.8
349.8
309.7
6:
423.1
347.2
361.0
404.5
331.0
348.9
381.7
8:
393.4
366.2
351.0
357.1
409.9
367.3
382.0
10:
362.7
452.9
461.4
433.1
410.6
384.2
362.6
12:
418.4
441.8
419.9
410.7
473.4
441.2
465.8
Does variation in plate length have any effect on true average axial stiffness? State the relevant hypotheses using analysis of variance.
H0: ?1 ≠ ?2 ≠ ?3 ≠ ?4 ≠ ?5Ha: at least two ?i's are equalH0: ?1 = ?2 = ?3 = ?4 = ?5Ha: all five ?i's are unequal H0: ?1 = ?2 = ?3 = ?4 = ?5Ha: at least two ?i's are unequalH0: ?1 ≠ ?2 ≠ ?3 ≠ ?4 ≠ ?5Ha: all five ?i's are equal
Test the relevant hypotheses using analysis of variance with ? = 0.01. Display your results in an ANOVA table. (Round your answers to two decimal places.)
Source
Degrees offreedom
Sum…
Consider the accompanying data on flexural strength (MPa) for concrete beams of a certain type.
5.5
7.2
7.3
6.3
8.1
6.8
7.0
7.2
6.8
6.5
7.0
6.3
7.9
9.0
8.7
8.7
7.8
9.7
7.4
7.7
9.7
8.0
7.7
11.6
11.3
11.8
10.7
The data below give accompanying strength observations for cylinders.
6.6
5.8
7.8
7.1
7.2
9.2
6.6
8.3
7.0
8.4
7.3
8.1
7.4
8.5
8.9
9.8
9.7
14.1
12.6
11.3
Prior to obtaining data, denote the beam strengths by X1, . . . , Xm and the cylinder strengths by Y1, . . . , Yn. Suppose that the Xi's constitute a random sample from a distribution with mean μ1 and standard deviation σ1 and that the Yi's form a random sample (independent of the Xi's) from another distribution with mean μ2 and standard deviation σ2.
Compute the estimated standard error. (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
(c) Calculate a point estimate of the ratio σ1/σ2 of the two standard deviations. (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
(d) Suppose a single beam and a single cylinder are…
Consider the accompanying data on flexural strength (MPa) for concrete beams of a certain type.
5.3
7.2
7.3
6.3
8.1
6.8
7.0
7.1
6.8
6.5
7.0
6.3
7.9
9.0
9.0
8.7
7.8
9.7
7.4
7.7
9.7
7.9
7.7
11.6
11.3
11.8
10.7
The data below give accompanying strength observations for cylinders.
6.8
5.8
7.8
7.1
7.2
9.2
6.6
8.3
7.0
9.0
7.6
8.1
7.4
8.5
8.9
9.8
9.7
14.1
12.6
11.8
Prior to obtaining data, denote the beam strengths by X1, . . . , Xm and the cylinder strengths by Y1, . . . , Yn. Suppose that the Xi's constitute a random sample from a distribution with mean ?1 and standard deviation ?1 and that the Yi's form a random sample (independent of the Xi's) from another distribution with mean ?2 and standard deviation ?2.
(a) Calculate the estimate for the given data. (Round your answer to three decimal places.) (b) Use rules of variance to obtain an expression for the variance and standard deviation (standard error) of the estimator in part (a).
V(X − Y)
=
V(X) + V(Y)
=…
Chapter 1 Solutions
Statistics for Engineers and Scientists - With Access
Ch. 1.1 - Each of the following processes involves sampling...Ch. 1.1 - If you wanted to estimate the mean height of all...Ch. 1.1 - True or false: a. A simple random sample is...Ch. 1.1 - A sample of 100 college students is selected from...Ch. 1.1 - A certain process for manufacturing integrated...Ch. 1.1 - Refer to Exercise 5. True or false: a. If the...Ch. 1.1 - To determine whether a sample should be treated as...Ch. 1.1 - A medical researcher wants to determine whether...Ch. 1.1 - A medical researcher wants to determine whether...Ch. 1.2 - True or false: For any list of numbers, half of...
Ch. 1.2 - Is the sample mean always the most frequently...Ch. 1.2 - Is the sample mean always equal to one of the...Ch. 1.2 - Is the sample median always equal to one of the...Ch. 1.2 - Find a sample size for which the median will...Ch. 1.2 - For a list of positive numbers, is it possible for...Ch. 1.2 - Is it possible for the standard deviation of a...Ch. 1.2 - In a certain company, every worker received a...Ch. 1.2 - In another company, every worker received a 5%...Ch. 1.2 - A sample of 100 adult women was taken, and each...Ch. 1.2 - In a sample of 20 men, the mean height was 178 cm....Ch. 1.2 - Each of 16 students measured the circumference of...Ch. 1.2 - Refer to Exercise 12. a. If the measurements for...Ch. 1.2 - There are 10 employees in a particular division of...Ch. 1.2 - Quartiles divide a sample into four nearly equal...Ch. 1.2 - In each of the following data sets, tell whether...Ch. 1.3 - The weather in Los Angeles is dry most of the...Ch. 1.3 - Forty-five specimens of a certain type of powder...Ch. 1.3 - Refer to Table 1.2 (in Section 1.2). Construct a...Ch. 1.3 - Following are measurements of soil concentrations...Ch. 1.3 - A certain reaction was run several times using...Ch. 1.3 - Sketch a histogram for which a. The mean is...Ch. 1.3 - The figure below is a histogram showing the...Ch. 1.3 - The histogram below presents the compressive...Ch. 1.3 - Refer to Table 1.4 (in Section 1.3). a. Using the...Ch. 1.3 - Refer to Table 1.5 (in Section 1.3). a. Using the...Ch. 1.3 - The following table presents the number of...Ch. 1.3 - Which of the following statistics cannot be...Ch. 1.3 - A sample of 100 resistors has an average...Ch. 1.3 - Following are boxplots comparing the amount of...Ch. 1.3 - Following are summary statistics for two data...Ch. 1.3 - Match each histogram to the box plot that...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 17ECh. 1.3 - Match each scatterplot to the statement that best...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 19ECh. 1 - A vendor converts the weights on the packages she...Ch. 1 - Refer to Exercise 1. The vendor begins using...Ch. 1 - The specification for the pull strength of a wire...Ch. 1 - A coin is tossed twice and comes up heads both...Ch. 1 - The smallest number on a list is changed from 12.9...Ch. 1 - There are 15 numbers on a list, and the smallest...Ch. 1 - There are 15 numbers on a list, and the mean is...Ch. 1 - The article The Selection of Yeast Strains for the...Ch. 1 - Concerning the data represented in the following...Ch. 1 - True or false: In any boxplot, a. The length of...Ch. 1 - For each of the following histograms, determine...Ch. 1 - In the article Occurrence and Distribution of...Ch. 1 - The article Vehicle-Arrival Characteristics at...Ch. 1 - The cumulative frequency and the cumulative...Ch. 1 - The article Hydrogeochemical Characteristics of...Ch. 1 - Water scarcity has traditionally been a major...Ch. 1 - Prob. 18SECh. 1 - The article The Ball-on-Three-Ball Test for...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, statistics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- The article “Effect of Varying Solids Concentration and Organic Loading on the Performance of Temperature Phased Anaerobic Digestion Process” (S. Vandenburgh and T. Ellis, Water Environment Research, 2002:142–148) discusses experiments to determine the effect of the solids concentration on the performance of treatment methods for wastewater sludge. In the first experiment, the concentration of solids (in g/L) was 43.94 ± 1.18. In the second experiment, which was independent of the first, the concentration was 48.66 ± 1.76. Estimate the difference in the concentration between the two experiments, and find the uncertainty in the estimate.arrow_forwardThe spike stature of the plants grown from the seeds of the porcine separates (Dactylis glomerata L) collected from the University campus and İbradı Eynif pasture are given below. In this plant, compare whether there is a difference between regions in terms of spike height. Virgo Height (cm) Data obtained from plants collected from university campus 5 6 8 7 8 6 5 5 4 6 6 Data obtained from plants collected from Eynif pasture 12 9 11 9 9 11 9 10 11 10 Note: Your results interpretation according to two different possibilities (Do it separately, assuming that it is 0.07 and 0.04).arrow_forwardThe article “Hydrogeochemical Characteristics of Groundwater in a Mid-Western CoastalAquifer System” (S. Jeen, J. Kim, et al., Geosciences Journal, 2001:339–348) presentsmeasurements of various properties of shallow groundwater in a certain aquifer system inKorea. Following are measurements of electrical conductivity (in microsiemens percentimeter) for 23 water samples.2099 528 2030 1350 1018 384 14991265 375 424 789 810 522 513488 200 215 486 257 557 260461 500Find the mean.Find the standard deviation.Find the median.Construct a dotplot.Find the 10% trimmed mean.Find the first quartile.Find the third quartile.Find the interquartile range.Construct a boxplot.Which of the points, if any, are outliers?If a histogram were constructed, would it be skewed to the left, skewed to the right, orapproximately symmetric?arrow_forward
- A paper investigated the driving behavior of teenagers by observing their vehicles as they left a high school parking lot and then again at a site approximately 1 2 mile from the school. Assume that it is reasonable to regard the teen drivers in this study as representative of the population of teen drivers. Amount by Which Speed Limit Was Exceeded MaleDriver FemaleDriver 1.2 -0.1 1.4 0.4 0.9 1.1 2.1 0.7 0.7 1.1 1.3 1.2 3 0.1 1.3 0.9 0.6 0.5 2.1 0.5 (a) Use a .01 level of significance for any hypothesis tests. Data consistent with summary quantities appearing in the paper are given in the table. The measurements represent the difference between the observed vehicle speed and the posted speed limit (in miles per hour) for a sample of male teenage drivers and a sample of female teenage drivers. (Use μmales − μfemales.Round your test statistic to two decimal places. Round your degrees of freedom down to the nearest whole number. Round your p-value to…arrow_forwardA paper investigated the driving behavior of teenagers by observing their vehicles as they left a high school parking lot and then again at a site approximately 1 2 mile from the school. Assume that it is reasonable to regard the teen drivers in this study as representative of the population of teen drivers. Amount by Which Speed Limit Was Exceeded MaleDriver FemaleDriver 1.3 -0.1 1.3 0.4 0.9 1.1 2.1 0.7 0.7 1.1 1.3 1.2 3 0.1 1.3 0.9 0.6 0.5 2.1 0.5 (a) Use a .01 level of significance for any hypothesis tests. Data consistent with summary quantities appearing in the paper are given in the table. The measurements represent the difference between the observed vehicle speed and the posted speed limit (in miles per hour) for a sample of male teenage drivers and a sample of female teenage drivers. (Use μmales − μfemales.Round your test statistic to two decimal places. Round your degrees of freedom down to the nearest whole number. Round your p-value to…arrow_forwardrofessor Cornish studied rainfall cycles and sunspot cycles. (Reference: Australian Journal of Physics, Vol. 7, pp. 334-346.) Part of the data include amount of rain (in mm) for 6-day intervals. The following data give rain amounts for consecutive 6-day intervals at Adelaide, South Australia. 7 28 7 1 69 3 1 4 22 7 16 4 54 160 60 73 27 3 3 1 7 144 107 4 91 44 1 8 4 22 4 59 116 52 4 155 42 24 11 43 3 24 19 74 26 63 110 39 34 71 52 39 8 0 15 2 14 9 1 2 4 9 6 10 (i) Find the median. (Use 1 decimal place.)(ii) Convert this sequence of numbers to a sequence of symbols A and B, where A indicates a value above the median and B a value below the median. Test the sequence for randomness about the median at the 5% level of significance. (b) Find the number of runs R, n1, and n2. Let n1 = number of values above the median and n2 = number of values below the median. R n1 n2 (c) In the case, n1 > 20, we cannot use Table 10 of Appendix II to find the critical…arrow_forward
- The data given is shown below 40 40 43 46 44 49 51 54 46 51 47 49 49 45 45 44 45 41 49 52 51 54 50 51 41 52 53 50 46 56 42 42 40 42 49 47 51 48 46 57 48 55 49 46 57 44 49 43 44 43 51 48 48 46 49 Class width = 6 Find the following: A. Decile (5th) B. Quartile (2nd) C. Skewness D. Kurtosisarrow_forwardThe article “Withdrawal Strength of Threaded Nails” (D. Rammer, S. Winistorfer, and D. Bender, Journal of Structural Engineering 2001:442–449) describes an experiment comparing the ultimate withdrawal strengths (in N/mm) for several types of nails. For an annularly threaded nail with shank diameter 3.76 mm driven into spruce-pine-fir lumber, the ultimate withdrawal strength was modeled as lognormal with μ = 3.82 and σ = 0.219. For a helically threaded nail under the same conditions, the strength was modeled as lognormal with μ = 3.47 and σ = 0.272. a) What is the mean withdrawal strength for annularly threaded nails? b) What is the mean withdrawal strength for helically threaded nails? c) For which type of nail is it more probable that the withdrawal strength will be greater than 50 N/mm? d) What is the probability that a helically threaded nail will have a greater withdrawal strength than the median for annularly threaded nails? e) An experiment is performed in which withdrawal…arrow_forwardSuppose that we want to compare the cholestrol contents of four competing diet foods on the basis of the following data (in milligrams per package) which were obtained for three 6-ounce packages of each of the diet foods: Diet food A: 3.6 4.1 4.0 Diet food B: 3.1 3.2 3.9 Diet food C: 3.2 3.5 3.5 Diet food D: 3.5 3.8 3.8 a)Fill in the blanks below. b)Test at the 0.05 level of significance whether the differences among means obtained for the four competing diet foods (Diet A, B, C, D) are significant? (Ftable=4.07) ONE-WAY ANOVA TABLE Source of Variation Degrees of Freedom Sum of Squares Mean Square F Treatments ? 0.54 ? ? Error ? ? ? Total ? 1.18arrow_forward
- Suppose that we want to compare the cholestrol contents of four competing diet foods on the basis of the following data (in milligrams per package) which were obtained for three 6-ounce packages of each of the diet foods: Diet food A: 3.6 4.1 4.0 Diet food B: 3.1 3.2 3.9 Diet food C: 3.2 3.5 3.5 Diet food D: 3.5 3.8 3.8 Fill in the blanks below. Test at the 0.05 level of significance whether the differences among means obtained for the four competing diet foods (Diet A, B, C, D) are significant? (Ftable=4.07) source of varation degrees of freedom sum of squares mean squares F treatments ? 0.54 ? ? error ? ? ? total ? 1.18arrow_forwardAn article in the Journal of Applied Polymer Science (Vol. 56, pp. 471–476, 1995) studied the effect of the mole ratio of sebacic acid on the intrinsic viscosity of copolyesters.- The data follows: Viscosity 0.45 0.2 0.34 0.58 0.7 0.57 0.55 0.44 Mole ratio 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 (a) Construct a scatter diagram of the data.arrow_forwardIn each of Exercises, use the Wilcoxon signed-rank test to perform the required hypothesis test. Global Warming? During the late 1800s, Lake Wingra in Madison, Wisconsin, was frozen over an average of 124.9 days per year. A random sample of eight recent years provided the following data on numbers of days that the lake was frozen over. 103 80 79 135 134 77 80 111 At the 5% significance level, do the data provide sufficient evidence to conclude that the average number of ice days is less now than in the late 1800s?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- MATLAB: An Introduction with ApplicationsStatisticsISBN:9781119256830Author:Amos GilatPublisher:John Wiley & Sons IncProbability and Statistics for Engineering and th...StatisticsISBN:9781305251809Author:Jay L. DevorePublisher:Cengage LearningStatistics for The Behavioral Sciences (MindTap C...StatisticsISBN:9781305504912Author:Frederick J Gravetter, Larry B. WallnauPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th E...StatisticsISBN:9780134683416Author:Ron Larson, Betsy FarberPublisher:PEARSONThe Basic Practice of StatisticsStatisticsISBN:9781319042578Author:David S. Moore, William I. Notz, Michael A. FlignerPublisher:W. H. FreemanIntroduction to the Practice of StatisticsStatisticsISBN:9781319013387Author:David S. Moore, George P. McCabe, Bruce A. CraigPublisher:W. H. Freeman
MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
Statistics
ISBN:9781119256830
Author:Amos Gilat
Publisher:John Wiley & Sons Inc
Probability and Statistics for Engineering and th...
Statistics
ISBN:9781305251809
Author:Jay L. Devore
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Statistics for The Behavioral Sciences (MindTap C...
Statistics
ISBN:9781305504912
Author:Frederick J Gravetter, Larry B. Wallnau
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th E...
Statistics
ISBN:9780134683416
Author:Ron Larson, Betsy Farber
Publisher:PEARSON
The Basic Practice of Statistics
Statistics
ISBN:9781319042578
Author:David S. Moore, William I. Notz, Michael A. Fligner
Publisher:W. H. Freeman
Introduction to the Practice of Statistics
Statistics
ISBN:9781319013387
Author:David S. Moore, George P. McCabe, Bruce A. Craig
Publisher:W. H. Freeman
The Shape of Data: Distributions: Crash Course Statistics #7; Author: CrashCourse;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPFNxD3Yg6U;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Shape, Center, and Spread - Module 20.2 (Part 1); Author: Mrmathblog;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COaid7O_Gag;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Shape, Center and Spread; Author: Emily Murdock;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YyW0DSCzpM;License: Standard Youtube License