
Probability And Statistical Inference (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780135189399
Author: Robert V. Hogg, Elliot Tanis, Dale Zimmerman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 1.1, Problem 10E
Prove Theorem 1.1-6.
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Answer questions 8.3.3 and 8.3.4 respectively
8.3.4 .WP An article in Medicine and Science in Sports and
Exercise [“Electrostimulation Training Effects on the Physical Performance of Ice Hockey Players” (2005, Vol. 37, pp.
455–460)] considered the use of electromyostimulation (EMS) as
a method to train healthy skeletal muscle. EMS sessions consisted of 30 contractions (4-second duration, 85 Hz) and were carried
out three times per week for 3 weeks on 17 ice hockey players.
The 10-meter skating performance test showed a standard deviation of 0.09 seconds. Construct a 95% confidence interval of the
standard deviation of the skating performance test.
8.6.7 Consider the tire-testing data in Exercise 8.2.3. Compute a 95% tolerance interval on the life of the tires that has confidence level 95%. Compare the length of the tolerance interval with the length of the 95% CI on the population mean. Which interval is shorter? Discuss the difference in interpretation of these two intervals.
8.6.2 Consider the natural frequency of beams described in
Exercise 8.2.8. Compute a 90% prediction interval on the
diameter of the natural frequency of the next beam of this type
that will be tested. Compare the length of the prediction interval
with the length of the 90% CI on the population mean.
8.6.3 Consider the television tube brightness test described in
Exercise 8.2.7. Compute a 99% prediction interval on the brightness of the next tube tested. Compare the length of the prediction
interval with the length of the 99% CI on the population mean.
Chapter 1 Solutions
Probability And Statistical Inference (10th Edition)
Ch. 1.1 - Of a group of patients having injuries, 28% visit...Ch. 1.1 - An insurance company looks at its auto insurance...Ch. 1.1 - Draw one card at random from a standard deck of...Ch. 1.1 - A fair coin is tossed four times, and the sequence...Ch. 1.1 - Consider the trial on which a 3 is first observed...Ch. 1.1 - If P(A)=0.5,P(B)=0.6, and P(AB)=0.4, find (a)...Ch. 1.1 - Given that P(AB)=0.76 and P(AB)=0.87, find P(A).Ch. 1.1 - During a visit to a primary care physicians...Ch. 1.1 - Roll a fair six-sided die three times. Let...Ch. 1.1 - Prove Theorem 1.1-6.
Ch. 1.1 - A typical roulette wheel used in a casino has 38...Ch. 1.1 - Let x equal a number that is selected randomly...Ch. 1.1 - Divide a line segment into two parts by selecting...Ch. 1.1 - Let the interval [r,r] be the base of a...Ch. 1.1 - Let S=A1A2...Am, where events A1,A2,...,Am are...Ch. 1.1 - Let pn,n=0,1,2..., be the probability that an...Ch. 1.2 - A combination lock was left at a fitness center....Ch. 1.2 - In designing an experiment, the researcher can...Ch. 1.2 - How many different license plates are possible if...Ch. 1.2 - The eating club is hosting a make-your-own sun-dae...Ch. 1.2 - How many four-letter code words are possible using...Ch. 1.2 - Suppose that Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer are...Ch. 1.2 - In a state lottery, four digits are drawn at...Ch. 1.2 - How many different varieties of pizza can be made...Ch. 1.2 - The World Series in baseball continues until...Ch. 1.2 - Pascals triangle gives a method for calculating...Ch. 1.2 - Three students (S) and six faculty members (F) are...Ch. 1.2 - Prove: r=0n(1)r(nr)=0andr=0n(nr)=2n HINT: Consider...Ch. 1.2 - A bridge hand is found by taking 13 cards at...Ch. 1.2 - At the end of a semester, 29 students in a...Ch. 1.2 - Prove Equation 1.2-2. HINT: First selectn1...Ch. 1.2 - A box of candy hearts contains 52 hearts, of which...Ch. 1.2 - A poker hand is defined as drawing five cards at...Ch. 1.2 - For each positive integer n, let P({n})=(12)n....Ch. 1.3 - A common screening test for 1-IIV is called the...Ch. 1.3 - The following table classifies 1456 people by...Ch. 1.3 - Let A1 and A2 be the events that a person is left-...Ch. 1.3 - Two cards are drawn successively and without...Ch. 1.3 - Suppose that the gene for eye color for a certain...Ch. 1.3 - A researcher finds that, of 982 men who died in...Ch. 1.3 - An urn contains four colored halls: two orange and...Ch. 1.3 - An urn contains 17 balls marked LOSE and three...Ch. 1.3 - An urn contains four balls numbered 1 through 4....Ch. 1.3 - A single card is drawn at random from each of six...Ch. 1.3 - Consider the birthdays of the students in a class...Ch. 1.3 - You are a member of a class of 18 students. A bowl...Ch. 1.3 - In the gambling game craps. two dice are rolled...Ch. 1.3 - Some albatrosses return to the worlds only...Ch. 1.3 - An urn contains eight red and seven blue balls. A...Ch. 1.3 - Bowl A contains three red and two white chips, and...Ch. 1.4 - Let A and B be independent events with P(A)=0.7...Ch. 1.4 - Let P(A)=0.3 and P(B)=0.6. (a) Find P(AB) when A...Ch. 1.4 - Let A and B be independent events with P(A)=14 and...Ch. 1.4 - Prove parts (b) and (c) of Theorem 1.4-1.Ch. 1.4 - If P(A)=0.8,P(B)=0.5, and P(AB)=0.9, are A and B...Ch. 1.4 - Show that if A, B, and C are mutually independent,...Ch. 1.4 - Each of three football players will attempt to...Ch. 1.4 - Die A has orange on one face and blue on five...Ch. 1.4 - Suppose that A, B, and C are mutually independent...Ch. 1.4 - Let D1,D2,D3 be three four-sided dice whose sides...Ch. 1.4 - Let A and B be two events. (a) If the events A and...Ch. 1.4 - Flip an unbiased coin five independent times....Ch. 1.4 - An urn contains two red balls and four white...Ch. 1.4 - In Example 1.4-5, suppose that the probability of...Ch. 1.4 - An urn contains ten red and ten white balls. The...Ch. 1.4 - An urn contains five balls, one marked WIN and...Ch. 1.4 - Each of the 12 students in a class is given a fair...Ch. 1.4 - An eight-team single-elimination tournament is set...Ch. 1.4 - Extend Example 1.4-6 to an n-sided die. That is,...Ch. 1.4 - Hunters A and B shoot at a target with...Ch. 1.4 - There are eight major blood types, whose...Ch. 1.5 - Bowl B1 contains two white chips, bowl B2 contains...Ch. 1.5 - Bean seeds from supplier A have an 85% germination...Ch. 1.5 - A doctor is concerned about the relationship...Ch. 1.5 - Assume that an insurance company knows the...Ch. 1.5 - At a hospitals emergency room, patients are...Ch. 1.5 - A life insurance company issues standard,...Ch. 1.5 - A chemist wishes to detect an impurity in a...Ch. 1.5 - A store sells four brands of tablets. The least...Ch. 1.5 - There is a new diagnostic test for a disease that...Ch. 1.5 - Prob. 10ECh. 1.5 - At the beginning of a certain study of a group of...Ch. 1.5 - Two processes of a company produce rolls of...Ch. 1.5 - A hospital receives 40% of its flu vaccine from...
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- Answer question S8 stepwisearrow_forwardAnswer questions 8.2.11 and 8.2.12 respectivelyarrow_forward8.4.2 An article in Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy [“Arthroscopic Meniscal Repair with an Absorbable Screw: Results and Surgical Technique” (2005, Vol. 13, pp. 273–279)] showed that only 25 out of 37 tears (67.6%) located between 3 and 6 mm from the meniscus rim were healed. a. Calculate a two-sided 95% confidence interval on the proportion of such tears that will heal. b. Calculate a 95% lower confidence bound on the proportion of such tears that will heal. 8.4.3 An article in the Journal of the American Statistical Association [“Illustration of Bayesian Inference in Normal Data Models Using Gibbs Sampling” (1990, Vol. 85, pp. 972–985)] measured the weight of 30 rats under experiment controls. Suppose that 12 were underweight rats. a. Calculate a 95% two-sided confidence interval on the true proportion of rats that would show underweight from the experiment. b. Using the point estimate of p obtained from the preliminary sample, what sample size is needed to be 95%…arrow_forward
- 8.4.8 Use the data from Exercise 8.4.2 to compute the two-sided Agresti-Coull CI on the proportion of tears that heal. Compare and discuss the relationship of this interval to the one computed in Exercise 8.4.2.arrow_forwardAnswer questions 8.3.7 and 8.4.1 respectivelyarrow_forward8.4.7 Use the data from Exercise 8.4.5 to compute the two-sided Agresti-Coull CI on the proportion of digits read correctly. Compare and discuss the relationship of this interval to the one computed in Exercise 8.4.5.arrow_forward
- 8.6.5 Consider the fuel rod enrichment data described in Exercise 8.2.11. Compute a 90% prediction interval on the enrichment of the next rod tested. Compare the length of the prediction interval with the length of the 99% CI on the population mean.arrow_forward8.4.4 The Arizona Department of Transportation wishes to survey state residents to determine what proportion of the population would like to increase statewide highway speed limits from 65 mph to 75 mph. How many residents does the department need to survey if it wants to be at least 99% confident that the sample proportion is within 0.05 of the true proportion? 8.4.5 The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has used optical character recognition (OCR) since the mid-1960s. In 1983, USPS began deploying the technology to major post offices throughout the country (www.britannica.com). Suppose that in a random sample of 500 handwritten zip code digits, 466 were read correctly. a. Construct a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of correct digits that can be automatically read. b. What sample size is needed to reduce the margin of error to 1%? c. How would the answer to part (b) change if you had to assume that the machine read only one-half of the digits correctly?arrow_forwardAnswer questions 8S7 and 8S14arrow_forward
- Answer questions 8.2.9 and 8.2.10 respectivelyarrow_forwardAnswer questions 8.3.5 and 8.3.6 respectivelyarrow_forward8.6.4 Consider the test on the compressive strength of concrete described in Exercise 8.2.9. Compute a 90% prediction interval on the next specimen of concrete tested. 8.6.5 . SS Consider the fuel rod enrichment data described in Exercise 8.2.11. Compute a 90% prediction interval on the enrichment of the next rod tested. Compare the length of the prediction interval with the length of the 99% CI on the population mean.arrow_forward
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