A study conducted in a small company yielded the results shown in the following table Age less than 25 25 - 45 45 - 65 Insurance 43 27 No Insurance 15 24 21 The expected number of people who have insurance from the "45 - 65" age group is O A. 27 O B. none of the other answers ОС. 379 D. 0.194% E. 27.281
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- The price to earnings ratio (P/E) is an important tool in financial work. A random sample of 14 large U.S. banks (J. P. Morgan, Bank of America, and others) gave the following P/E ratios.† 24 16 22 14 12 13 17 22 15 19 23 13 11 18 The sample mean is x ≈ 17.1. Generally speaking, a low P/E ratio indicates a "value" or bargain stock. Suppose a recent copy of a magazine indicated that the P/E ratio of a certain stock index is μ = 19. Let x be a random variable representing the P/E ratio of all large U.S. bank stocks. We assume that x has a normal distribution and σ = 4.6. Do these data indicate that the P/E ratio of all U.S. bank stocks is less than 19? Use α = 0.01. (a) What is the level of significance? Compute the z value of the sample test statistic. (Round your answer to two decimal places.)(c) Find (or estimate) the P-value. (Round your answer to four decimal places.)Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 215 numerical entries from the file and r = 50 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1.(i) Test the claim that p is less than 0.301. Use ? = 0.10. (a) What is the level of significance?State the null and alternate hypotheses. H0: p = 0.301; H1: p < 0.301H0: p < 0.301; H1: p = 0.301 H0: p = 0.301; H1: p > 0.301H0: p = 0.301; H1: p ≠ 0.301 (b) What sampling…Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 215 numerical entries from the file and r = 50 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1. (b) What sampling distribution will you use? The Student's t, since np > 5 and nq > 5.The standard normal, since np < 5 and nq < 5. The standard normal, since np > 5 and nq > 5.The Student's t, since np < 5 and nq < 5. What is the value of the sample test…
- What is the cumulative frequency of students that scored half of the points on the SAT? choices: 1. none of the above/can't be determined 2. 26 3. 9 4. 55.5 5. 0.35 I already tried 2(26) and 5(0.35) but it was wrong.Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 221 numerical entries from the file and r = 50 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1. (i) Test the claim that p is less than 0.301. Use α = 0.05. (a) What is the level of significance? State the null and alternate hypotheses. Ho: P = 0.301; H₁: p = 0.301 Ho: P 0.301 Ho: P = 0.301; H₁: p 5 and nq > 5. O The Student's t, since np 5 and nq > 5. What is the value of the…1.18 Cats on YouTube. Suppose you want to estimate the percentage of videos on YouTube that are cat videos. It is impossible for you to watch all videos on YouTube so you use a random video picker to select 1000 videos for you. You find that 2% of these videos are cat videos. Determine which of the following is an observation, a variable, a sample statistic (value calculated based on the observed sample), or a population parameter
- Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 223 numerical entries from the file and r = 48 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1.(i) Test the claim that p is less than 0.301. Use ? = 0.05. (a) What is the level of significance?State the null and alternate hypotheses. H0: p < 0.301; H1: p = 0.301 H0: p = 0.301; H1: p > 0.301 H0: p = 0.301; H1: p < 0.301 H0: p = 0.301; H1: p ≠ 0.301 (b) What sampling…5.35 Cyberbullying, continued. Refer to Exercise 5.33. a. What is the expected number of undergraduates in your sample who say that they have received hurtful comments online in the past 30 days? What is the expected number of undergraduates who say that they have not received hurtful comments online in the past 30 days? What do the two means add up to?Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 225 numerical entries from the file and r = 51 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1.(i) Test the claim that p is less than 0.301. Use ? = 0.05.
- Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 220 numerical entries from the file and r = 49 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1. A) What is the value of the sample test statistic? (Round your answer to two decimal places.)B) Find the P-value of the test statistic. (Round your answer to four decimal places.)Recall that Benford's Law claims that numbers chosen from very large data files tend to have "1" as the first nonzero digit disproportionately often. In fact, research has shown that if you randomly draw a number from a very large data file, the probability of getting a number with "1" as the leading digit is about 0.301. Now suppose you are an auditor for a very large corporation. The revenue report involves millions of numbers in a large computer file. Let us say you took a random sample of n = 220 numerical entries from the file and r = 49 of the entries had a first nonzero digit of 1. Let p represent the population proportion of all numbers in the corporate file that have a first nonzero digit of 1.