Standing eye heights of women are normally distributed with a mean of 1516 mm and a standard deviation of 63 mm (based on anthropometric survey data from Gordon, Churchill, et al.). a.) A door peephole is placed at a height that is uncomfortable for women with standing eye heights greater than 1605 mm. What percentage of women will find that height uncomfortable? b.) In selecting the height of a new door peephole, the architect wants its height to be suitable for the highest 99% of standing eye heights for women. What standing eye height of women separates the highest 99% from the lowest 1%? c.) What percentage of women have a standing eye height between 1420 mm and 1560 mm?

MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
6th Edition
ISBN:9781119256830
Author:Amos Gilat
Publisher:Amos Gilat
Chapter1: Starting With Matlab
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1P
icon
Related questions
icon
Concept explainers
Question

1.) Standing eye heights of women are normally distributed with a mean of 1516 mm and a standard
deviation of 63 mm (based on anthropometric survey data from Gordon, Churchill, et al.).
a.) A door peephole is placed at a height that is uncomfortable for women with standing eye heights
greater than 1605 mm. What percentage of women will find that height uncomfortable?
b.) In selecting the height of a new door peephole, the architect wants its height to be suitable for the
highest 99% of standing eye heights for women. What standing eye height of women separates the
highest 99% from the lowest 1%?
c.) What percentage of women have a standing eye height between 1420 mm and 1560 mm?
d.) What is the probability that a group of twenty women have an average standing eye height that is
less than 1500 mm? Even though our sample size is less than thirty, why can the Central Limit Theorem
still apply here?

Expert Solution
trending now

Trending now

This is a popular solution!

steps

Step by step

Solved in 3 steps with 4 images

Blurred answer
Follow-up Questions
Read through expert solutions to related follow-up questions below.
Follow-up Question

I am not understanding what the (normal dist excel) info is and where these numbers come from? and I am not sure what table these numbers come from? when I look at positive z-score table at 0.9-----and go to the last one of .09 it's .8389? Confused.

Solution
Bartleby Expert
SEE SOLUTION
Knowledge Booster
Continuous Probability Distribution
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
  • SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
Statistics
ISBN:
9781119256830
Author:
Amos Gilat
Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Probability and Statistics for Engineering and th…
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 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…
Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World (7th E…
Statistics
ISBN:
9780134683416
Author:
Ron Larson, Betsy Farber
Publisher:
PEARSON
The Basic Practice of Statistics
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
Introduction to the Practice of Statistics
Statistics
ISBN:
9781319013387
Author:
David S. Moore, George P. McCabe, Bruce A. Craig
Publisher:
W. H. Freeman