Concept explainers
Sleepwalking. In Exercises 21–25, refer to the accompanying table, which describes the numbers of adults in groups of five who reported sleepwalking (based on data from “Prevalence and Comorbidity of Nocturnal Wandering In the U.S. Adult General Population,” by Ohayon et al., Neurology, Vol. 78, No. 20).
25. Using Probabilities for Identifying Significant Events
a. Find the probability of getting exactly 1 sleepwalker among 5 adults.
b. Find the probability of gelling 1 or fewer sleepwalkers among 5 adults.
c. Which probability is relevant for determining whether 1 is a significantly low number of sleepwalkers among 5 adults: the result from part (a) or part (b)?
d. Is 1 a significantly low number of sleepwalkers among 5 adults? Why or why not?
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Chapter 5 Solutions
Elementary Statistics (nasta Edition), 13th Edition
- Calculus For The Life SciencesCalculusISBN:9780321964038Author:GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.Publisher:Pearson Addison Wesley,Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
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