Sample Questions For Final
Sample Questions For Final
BINOMIAL
II. According to the Vehicles Transportation Manual, 10% of the cars in the
U.S. are 12 years old. In a random sample of 10 cars, find the probability
a. That at least 5 cars are 12 years old.
b. That at most 8 cars are 12 years old.
c. That between 3 and 9 cars are 12 years old.
d. That anywhere from 3 to 9 cars are 12 years old.
e. That all of the cars in this sample are not 12 years old.
III. (24%) The United States Postal Service reports that 95% of first class
mail, in the same city, is delivered within 2 days of the time of mailing.
Eight letters are randomly sent (in the same city) to different locations.
a. What is the probability that all eight arrive within 2 days?
b. What is the probability that at most 2 arrive within 2 days?
c. What is the probability that at most 5 don’t arrive within 2 days?
d. Compute the mean and variance of the number of letters that will
arrive within 2 days.
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2. At most 2 will be defective?
A. 0.010 B. 0.075 C. 0.989 D. 0.925
3. What is the expected number of defective pins among these 10?
A. 5 B. 0.5 C. 1 D. 1.5
NORMAL + SAMPLING
I. Let X be a normally distributed random variable with = 10 & = 3.
a. Evaluate each of the following probabilities:
P(2.35 < X < 5.05), P(3.01 < X < 15.88), and P(X < 2.29).
b. Find the value of a in each of the following cases:
P(X < a) = 0.975, P(X > a) = 0.975, and P(-a < Z < a) = 0.7062.
II. A well-known brand of size D batteries has a life time that is normally
distributed with a mean µ = 105 hours and a deviation σ = 20 hours.
a. What proportion of these batteries has a life time of less than 95 hours?
b. If a person buys a battery of this type, what is the probability
that its life time would be between:
1. 70 and 90 hours? 2. 70 and 105 hours? 3. 90 and 125 hours?
c. Find a value a such that 89.97% of the batteries of this type will have
a life time of more than a hours.
Confidence Intervals
I. In order to estimate the average amount of food expenditures per week for
a family of 4, a random sample of different families is chosen and its mean
was found to be $50. Construct a confidence interval in each of the
following cases:
a. n = 49 and = 5, at the 90% confidence level.
b. n = 25 and s = 5, at the 95% confidence level.
II. A prospective purchaser of a fast food franchise is told that the daily
earnings for the franchise have a standard deviation of $90 a day. The
purchaser wishes to estimate the actual average daily earnings to within $20
with a probability of at least 0.95. How large a sample should he choose, if
such earnings are normally distributed?
III. The average cost of living for a husband and wife living in the Beirut area
follows a normal distribution. An official wants to estimate the true average
with a 95% confidence. He considers a sample of 35 citizens and finds their
mean to be L.L.500,000with a standard deviation of L.L.100,000. Construct
the required interval for this official.
IV. Professor Brown, a first-year math teacher at M.T.U. wants to estimate the
average time spent by his students doing their homework each night. He
randomly selects 20 students and finds that the mean and the standard
deviation of the time period spent (by these students) are 2.3 and 0.7 hours
respectively. Assuming that the population of study time is normal, construct:
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a. A 95% confidence interval for the mean amount of time spent studying
each night for all students.
b. If it is known that σ = 1, what would your 95% interval become?
Hypothesis Testing
State the null and alternative hypotheses for the following 3 conjectures:
I. A researcher thinks that if expectant mothers use vitamin pills, the
birth weight of the babies will increase. The average birth weight of
the population is 8.6 pounds.
II. An engineer hypothesizes that the mean number of defects can be
decreased in a manufacturing process of compact disks by using
robots instead of humans for certain tasks. The mean number of
defective disks per 1000 is 18.
III. A psychologist feels that playing soft music during a test will change
the results of the test. The psychologist is not sure whether the grades
will be higher or lower. In the past, the mean of the scores was 73.
IV. A researcher claims that the average cost of men’s athletic shoes is less
than $80. He selects a random sample of 36 pairs of shoes from a catalog
and finds that x́ = $71. Is there enough evidence to support the researcher’s
claim at the 0.10 level of significance? Assume σ = 19.2.
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Answers
BINOMIAL
III/pg. 1 n = 8, p = 0.95
a. P(x = 8) = 0.663 b. P(x ≤ 2) = 0
c. P( x́ ≤ 5) = P(x ≥ 3) = 1 d. µ = np = 7.6, σ2 = npq = 0.38
NORMAL + SAMPLING
III/pg. 2 Normal
a. µ = ??, σ = 9 and P(x > 89.99) = 0.1335. Look for Z where
P(Z > z0) = 0.1335 P(Z < z0) = 0.8665 z0 = 1.11 (Table)
89.99−μ
1.11 = 9
µ = 80
b. µ = 19, σ = ? and P(x < 14.35) = 0.0606. Look for Z where
14.35−19
P(Z < ?) = 0.0606 Z = -1.55 = 9
σ = 3.
5
IV/pg. 2 Normal µ = 65, σ = 5
a. P(x > 60) = 1- P(x < 60) = 1 – P(Z < -1) = 1 – 0.1587 = 0.8413
63−65
b. P( x́ < 63) =P(Z < 5 ) = P(Z < -2.4) = 0.0082.
√36
64−65 65.5−65
c. P(4096 < ∑ x < 4192) = P(64 < x́ < 65.5) = P( 5 < Z < 5 )
√ 64 √ 64
= P(-1.6 < Z < 0.8) = P(0.8) – P(-1.6) = 0.7333.
Confidence Intervals
6
σ
Thus Z ≤ 20 √ n ≥ 8.82 n ≥ 78.
√n
100000
III/pg. 3 500000 ± 1.96 = (466870, 533130)
√35
Hypothesis Testing
I. Solution:
H0: µ = 8.6 and H1: µ > 8.6
II. Solution:
H0: µ = 18 and H1: µ < 18
III. Solution:
H0: µ = 73 and H1: µ ≠ 73
IV. Solution:
H0: µ = 80 and H1: µ < 80 (Claim)
The critical value for α = 0.10 is Zc =1.282 one-tailed test. (n = 36 Z not t)
x́−μ
The test value Z = σ gives Z = -2.81
√n
Since |Z| > Zc, we reject H0 accept the researcher’s claim.
V. Solution:
H0: µ = 16.3 and H1: µ ≠ 16.
n = 10, x́ = 17.7 infections, and s = 1.8 we use t (2-tailed testing).
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17.7−16.3
Since calculated t = 1.8 = 2.46 > tc = 2.262, we reject H0: µ = 16.3
√ 10