STATISTICS F/BUS.+ECON.-18WK. MYSTATLAB
13th Edition
ISBN: 9780135901526
Author: MCCLAVE
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 6.5, Problem 6.72ACB
Study of aircraft bird-strikes. Refer to the International Journal for Traffic and Transport Engineering (Vol. 3, 2013) study of aircraft bird strikes at a Nigerian airport, Exercise 6.54 (p. 333). Recall that an air traffic controller wants to estimate the true proportion of aircraft bird strikes that occur above 100 feet. Determine how many aircraft bird strikes need to be analyzed to estimate the true proportion to within .05 if you use a 95% confidence interval.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A research group studying cell phone habits asked the question “Do you ever use your cell phone to make a payment at a convenience store?” to people selected from two random samples of cell phone users. One sample consisted of older adults, ages 35 years and older, and the other sample consisted of younger adults, ages 18 years to 34 years. The proportion of people who answered yes in each sample was used to create a 95 percent confidence interval of (0.097,0.125)(0.097,0.125) to estimate the difference (younger minus older) between the population proportions of people who would answer yes to the question. Which of the following is the best description of what is meant by 95 percent confidence?
In repeated random sampling with the same sample size, approximately 95% of the sample proportions from the younger group will be between 0.097 and 0.125 greater than the sample proportion from the older group.
A
In repeated random sampling with the same sample size,…
In a study of the accuracy of fast food drive-through orders, Restaurant A had 338 accurate orders and 70 that were not accurate.
a. Construct a 90% confidence interval estimate of the percentage of orders that are not accurate.
b. Compare the results from part (a) to this 90% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant B: 0.157<p<0.221. What do you conclude?
in a study of the accuracy of fast food drive thru orders, restaurant A had 209 accurate orders and 59 that were not accurate
A. construct a 95% confidence interval estimate of the percentage of orders that are not accurate
B. compare the results from part (a) to this 95% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at restaurant B: 0.189 <p<0.289. what do you conclude?
Chapter 6 Solutions
STATISTICS F/BUS.+ECON.-18WK. MYSTATLAB
Ch. 6.2 - Find z/2 for each of the following: a. a . = .10...Ch. 6.2 - What is the confidence level of each of the...Ch. 6.2 - A random sample of n measurements was selected...Ch. 6.2 - A random sample of 90 observations produced a mean...Ch. 6.2 - A random sample of 70 observations from a normally...Ch. 6.2 - Use the applet Confidence Intervals for a Mean...Ch. 6.2 - Use the applet Confidence Intervals for a Mean...Ch. 6.2 - Prob. 6.6LMCh. 6.2 - Explain the difference between an interval...Ch. 6.2 - Prob. 6.8LM
Ch. 6.2 - Will a large-sample confidence interval be valid...Ch. 6.2 - Heart rate variability of police officers. Are...Ch. 6.2 - Tipping points in daily deal transactions? Online...Ch. 6.2 - Corporate sustainability of CPA firms. Corporate...Ch. 6.2 - College dropout study. Refer to the American...Ch. 6.2 - Wear-out of used display panels. Refer to Exercise...Ch. 6.2 - Unethical corporate conduct. How complicit are...Ch. 6.2 - Shopping on Black Friday. The day after...Ch. 6.2 - 401 (k) Participation rates. Named for the section...Ch. 6.2 - Accounting and Machiavellianism. Refer to the...Ch. 6.2 - Facial structure of CEOs. In Psychological Science...Ch. 6.2 - Improving SAT scores. Refer to the Chance (Winter...Ch. 6.2 - The Raid test kitchen. According to scientists,...Ch. 6.3 - Suppose you have selected a random sample of n = 5...Ch. 6.3 - Use the applet Confidence Intervals for a Mean...Ch. 6.3 - Use the applet Confidence Intervals for a Mean...Ch. 6.3 - Explain the differences in the sampling...Ch. 6.3 - Let t0 be a specific value of t. Use Table III in...Ch. 6.3 - The following random sample was selected from a...Ch. 6.3 - The following sample of 16 measurements was...Ch. 6.3 - Lobster trap placement. An observational study of...Ch. 6.3 - Radon exposure in Egyptian tombs. Many ancient...Ch. 6.3 - Do social robots walk or roll? Refer to the...Ch. 6.3 - Hospital length of stay. Health insurers and the...Ch. 6.3 - Repair and replacement costs of water pipes. Refer...Ch. 6.3 - Prob. 6.34ACICh. 6.3 - Oxygen bubbles in molten salt. Molten salt is used...Ch. 6.3 - Performance of stock screeners. In Exercise 2.44...Ch. 6.3 - Minimizing tractor skidding distance. When...Ch. 6.3 - Crude oil biodegradation. Refer to the Journal of...Ch. 6.3 - Largest private companies. IPOsinitial public...Ch. 6.4 - Describe the sampling distribution of p based on...Ch. 6.4 - Use the applet Confidence Intervals for a...Ch. 6.4 - Prob. 6.6AECh. 6.4 - For the binomial sample information summarized in...Ch. 6.4 - A random sample of size n = 121 yielded p=.88. a....Ch. 6.4 - A random sample of size n = 225 yielded p=.46. a....Ch. 6.4 - A random sample of 50 consumers taste-tested a new...Ch. 6.4 - Customer participation in store loyalty card...Ch. 6.4 - Crash risk of using cell phones while driving....Ch. 6.4 - Zillow.com estimates of home values. Zillow.com is...Ch. 6.4 - Do social robots walk or roll? Refer to the...Ch. 6.4 - Is Starbucks coffee overpriced? The Minneapolis...Ch. 6.4 - Nannies who are INA certified. The International...Ch. 6.4 - Prob. 6.51ACICh. 6.4 - Prob. 6.52ACICh. 6.4 - Minority ownership of franchises. According to a...Ch. 6.4 - Study of aircraft bird-strikes. As worldwide air...Ch. 6.4 - Prob. 6.55ACICh. 6.4 - Diamonds sold on the open market. Refer to the...Ch. 6.4 - Are you really being served red snapper? Refer to...Ch. 6.4 - Eye shadow, mascara, and nickel allergies....Ch. 6.4 - Prob. 6.59ACACh. 6.5 - If you wish to estimate a population mean with a...Ch. 6.5 - Suppose you wish to estimate a population mean...Ch. 6.5 - In each case, find the approximate sample size...Ch. 6.5 - The following is a 90% confidence interval for p:...Ch. 6.5 - It costs you 10 to draw a sample of size n = 1 and...Ch. 6.5 - Suppose you wish to estimate the mean of a normal...Ch. 6.5 - If nothing is known about p. .5 can be substituted...Ch. 6.5 - Aluminum cans contaminated by fire. A gigantic...Ch. 6.5 - Accounting and Machiavellianism. Refer to the...Ch. 6.5 - Lobster trap placement. Refer to the Bulletin of...Ch. 6.5 - Evaporation from swimming pools. Refer to the...Ch. 6.5 - Do social robots walk or roll? Refer to the...Ch. 6.5 - Study of aircraft bird-strikes. Refer to the...Ch. 6.5 - Bacteria in bottled water. Is the bottled water...Ch. 6.5 - Shopping on Black Friday. Refer to the...Ch. 6.5 - Monitoring phone calls to a toll-free number. A...Ch. 6.5 - Eye shadow, mascara, and nickel allergies. Refer...Ch. 6.5 - Prob. 6.77ACICh. 6.5 - Is caffeine addictive? Does the caffeine in...Ch. 6.5 - Prob. 6.79ACACh. 6.6 - Calculate the percentage of the population sampled...Ch. 6.6 - Suppose the standard deviation of the population...Ch. 6.6 - Suppose N = 5,000, n = 64, and s = 24. a. Compare...Ch. 6.6 - Suppose N = 10,000, n = 2,000. and s = 50. a....Ch. 6.6 - Prob. 6.84LMCh. 6.6 - Prob. 6.85LMCh. 6.6 - Prob. 6.86LMCh. 6.6 - NFL player survey. Researchers at the University...Ch. 6.6 - Magazine subscriber salaries. Each year, the trade...Ch. 6.6 - Auditing sampling methods. Traditionally. auditors...Ch. 6.6 - Prob. 6.90ACICh. 6.6 - Invoice errors in a billing system In a study of...Ch. 6.6 - Prob. 6.92ACACh. 6.7 - For each of the following combinations of and...Ch. 6.7 - Given the following values of x, s, and n, form a...Ch. 6.7 - Prob. 6.95LMCh. 6.7 - A random sample of n = 6 observations from a...Ch. 6.7 - Oil content of fried sweet potato chips. The...Ch. 6.7 - Corporate sustainability of CPA firms. Refer to...Ch. 6.7 - Facial structure of CEOs. Refer to the...Ch. 6.7 - Radon exposure in Egyptian tombs. Refer to the...Ch. 6.7 - Drug content assessment. Refer to the Analytical...Ch. 6.7 - Jitter in a water power system. Jitter is a term...Ch. 6.7 - Lobster trap placement Refer to the Bulletin of...Ch. 6.7 - Phishing attacks on e-mail accounts. Refer to the...Ch. 6.7 - Is honey a cough remedy? Refer to the Archives of...Ch. 6 - In each of the following instances determine...Ch. 6 - In random Sample of 400 measurements, 227 of the...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.109LMCh. 6 - Calculate the finite population correction factor...Ch. 6 - Find /22 and (1/2)2 from Table IV, Appendix D, for...Ch. 6 - Latex allergy in health care workers. Health care...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.113ACBCh. 6 - Products Made in the USA. Refer to Exercise 2.154...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.115ACBCh. 6 - Lead and copper in drinking water. Periodically,...Ch. 6 - Water pollution testing. The EPA wants to test a...Ch. 6 - Bankruptcy effect on U.S. airfares. Both Delta...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.119ACBCh. 6 - Motivation of drug dealers. Refer to the Applied...Ch. 6 - Budget lapsing at army hospitals Budget lapsing...Ch. 6 - Size of diamonds sold at retail. Refer to Exercise...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.123ACICh. 6 - Prob. 6.124ACICh. 6 - Surface roughness of pipe. Refer to the...Ch. 6 - Interviewing candidates for a job. The costs...Ch. 6 - Overbooking policies for major airlines. Airlines...Ch. 6 - Paying for music downloads if you use the...Ch. 6 - Accuracy of price scanners at Walmart. The...Ch. 6 - Contamination of New Jersey wells. Methyl t-butyl...Ch. 6 - Cell phone use by drivers. Studies have shown that...Ch. 6 - Salmonella poisoning from eating an ice cream bar....Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.133ACICh. 6 - Latex allergy in health care workers. Refer to the...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.135ACACh. 6 - Accountants salary survey. Each year, Management...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.137ACACh. 6 - A sampling dispute goes to court. Sampling of...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.139CTC
Additional Math Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Use the model developed in Example 1.5 to predict the total sales for weeks 2 through 16, and compare the resul...
Business Analytics
Refer to the Real Estate data, which reports information on homes sold in the Goodyear, Arizona, area during th...
Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics
Compare and contrast the nonscientific methods for knowing or acquiring knowledge (tenacity, intuition, authori...
Research Methods for the Behavioral Sciences (MindTap Course List)
Medication Usage In a survey of 3005 adults aged 57 through 85 years, it was found that 82% of them used at lea...
Statistical Reasoning for Everyday Life (5th Edition)
c
Solve.
70. Copy Center Account. Rachel’s copy-center bill for July was $327. She made a payment of $200 and t...
Developmental Mathematics (9th Edition)
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
- What is meant by the sample space of an experiment?arrow_forwardIn a study of the accuracy of fast food drive-through orders, Restaurant A had 263 accurate orders and 55 that were not accurate. a. Construct a 95%confidence interval estimate of the percentage of orders that are not accurate. b. Compare the results from part (a) to this 95% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant B: 0.152 <p<0.231. What do you conclude?arrow_forwardIn a study of the accuracy of fast food drive-through orders, Restaurant A had 281 accurate orders and 52 that were not accurate.a. Construct a 95% confidence interval estimate of the percentage of orders that are not accurate.b. Compare the results from part (a) to this 95% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant B: 0.138<p<0.217. What do you conclude?arrow_forward
- An environmental science teacher at a high school with a large population of students wanted to estimate the proportion of students at the school who regularly recycle plastic bottles. The teacher selected a random sample of students at the school to survey. Each selected student went into the teacher’s office, one at a time, and was asked to respond yes or no to the following question. Based on the responses, a 95 percent confidence interval for the proportion of all students at the school who would respond yes to the question was calculated as (0.584, 0.816 ). (b) Given the method used by the environmental science teacher to collect the responses, explain how bias might have been introduced and describe how the bias might affect the point estimate of the proportion of all students at the school who would respond yes to the question.arrow_forwardAn environmental science teacher at a high school with a large population of students wanted to estimate the proportion of students at the school who regularly recycle plastic bottles. The teacher selected a random sample of students at the school to survey. Each selected student went into the teacher’s office, one at a time, and was asked to respond yes or no to the following question. Based on the responses, a 95 percent confidence interval for the proportion of all students at the school who would respond yes to the question was calculated as (0.584, 0.816 ). (a) How many students were in the sample selected by the environmental science teacher?arrow_forwardAn environmental science teacher at a high school with a large population of students wanted to estimate the proportion of students at the school who regularly recycle plastic bottles. The teacher selected a random sample of students at the school to survey. Each selected student went into the teacher’s office, one at a time, and was asked to respond yes or no to the following question. Based on the responses, a 95 percent confidence interval for the proportion of all students at the school who would respond yes to the question was calculated as (0.584, 0.816 ). (c) The statistics teacher at the high school was concerned about the potential bias in the survey. To obtain a potentially less biased estimate of the proportion, the statistics teacher used an alternate method for collecting student responses. A random sample of 300 students was selected, and each student was given the following instructions on how to respond to the question. • In private, flip a fair coin. • If heads, you…arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College Algebra (MindTap Course List)AlgebraISBN:9781305652231Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff HughesPublisher:Cengage Learning
College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Algebra
ISBN:9781305652231
Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff Hughes
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Hypothesis Testing - Solving Problems With Proportions; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76VruarGn2Q;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Hypothesis Testing and Confidence Intervals (FRM Part 1 – Book 2 – Chapter 5); Author: Analystprep;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vth3yZIUlGQ;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY