In 1998, as an advertising campaign, the Nabisco Company announced a "1000 Chips Challenge," claiming that every 18-ounce bag of their Chips Ahoy! cookies contained at least 1000 chocolate chips. Dedicated statistics students at the Air Force Academy (no kidding) purchased some randomly selected bags of cookies and counted the chocolate chips. Some of their data are given below. Complete parts (a) through (c) below. 1244 1121 1214 1135 1087 1219 1270 1295 1419 1345 1356 1191 1325 1258 a) Check the assumptions and conditions for inference. Check the data for independence. Choose the correct answer below. OA. The data ale from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent. A. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent. B. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are independent. OC. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are not independent. D. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are not independent.

MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
6th Edition
ISBN:9781119256830
Author:Amos Gilat
Publisher:Amos Gilat
Chapter1: Starting With Matlab
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help in all part as soon as 

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Evaluate the histogram. Choose the correct answer below.
OA. The histogram is roughly unimodal and asymmetric, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows
a t-Student's model.
OB. The histogram is roughly unimodal and symmetric, with no outliers, so one can assume that the data come from a population that
follows a Normal model.
OC. The histogram is roughly bimodal and symmetric, with no outliers, so one can assume that the data come from a population that
follows a Normal model.
D. The histogram is roughly bimodal and asymmetric, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows
a t-Student's model.
Transcribed Image Text:0- 900 1600 sõen 04 900 F 1600 of 900 1600 Q Q 0+ 900 1600 Q Evaluate the histogram. Choose the correct answer below. OA. The histogram is roughly unimodal and asymmetric, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows a t-Student's model. OB. The histogram is roughly unimodal and symmetric, with no outliers, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows a Normal model. OC. The histogram is roughly bimodal and symmetric, with no outliers, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows a Normal model. D. The histogram is roughly bimodal and asymmetric, so one can assume that the data come from a population that follows a t-Student's model.
In 1998, as an advertising campaign, the Nabisco Company announced a "1000 Chips Challenge," claiming that every 18-ounce bag of their
Chips Ahoy! cookies contained at least 1000 chocolate chips. Dedicated statistics students at the Air Force Academy (no kidding) purchased
some randomly selected bags of cookies and counted the chocolate chips. Some of their data are given below. Complete parts (a)
through (c) below.
1244
1121
1214
1135
OO
1087
1219
1270
1295
1419
1345
1356
1191
1325
1258
a) Check the assumptions and conditions for inference.
Check the data for independence. Choose the correct answer below.
OA. The data ale from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent.
A. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent.
B. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are independent.
C. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are not independent.
D. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are not independent.
Transcribed Image Text:In 1998, as an advertising campaign, the Nabisco Company announced a "1000 Chips Challenge," claiming that every 18-ounce bag of their Chips Ahoy! cookies contained at least 1000 chocolate chips. Dedicated statistics students at the Air Force Academy (no kidding) purchased some randomly selected bags of cookies and counted the chocolate chips. Some of their data are given below. Complete parts (a) through (c) below. 1244 1121 1214 1135 OO 1087 1219 1270 1295 1419 1345 1356 1191 1325 1258 a) Check the assumptions and conditions for inference. Check the data for independence. Choose the correct answer below. OA. The data ale from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent. A. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are independent. B. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are independent. C. The sample is less than 10% of the population, so one can assume that the data are not independent. D. The data are from a random sample, so one can assume that they are not independent.
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