
MyLab Statistics with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Essentials of Statistics
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780134870113
Author: Mario F. Triola
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 11, Problem 1TP
Use Statdisk, Minitab, Excel, StatCrunch, a TI-83/84 Plus calculator, or any other software package or calculator capable of generating equally likely random digits between 0 and 9 inclusive. Generate 5000 digits and record the results in the accompanying table. Use a 0.05 significance level to test the claim that the sample digits come from a population with a uniform distribution (so that all digits are equally likely). Does the random number generator appear to be working as it should?
Statdisk: | Select Data, then Uniform Generator. |
Minitab: | Select Calc, Random Data, Integer. |
Excel: | Click Insert |
TI-83/84 Plus: | Press MATH, select PROB, then use randInt function with the format of randInt(lower, upper, n). |
StatCruncb: | Select Data, Simulate, Discrete Uniform. |
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
I need help with this problem and an explanation of the solution for the image described below. (Statistics: Engineering Probabilities)
I need help with this problem and an explanation of the solution for the image described below. (Statistics: Engineering Probabilities)
This exercise is based on the following data on four bodybuilding supplements. (Figures shown correspond to a single serving.)
Creatine(grams)
L-Glutamine(grams)
BCAAs(grams)
Cost($)
Xtend(SciVation)
0
2.5
7
1.00
Gainz(MP Hardcore)
2
3
6
1.10
Strongevity(Bill Phillips)
2.5
1
0
1.20
Muscle Physique(EAS)
2
2
0
1.00
Your personal trainer suggests that you supplement with at least 10 grams of creatine, 39 grams of L-glutamine, and 90 grams of BCAAs each week. You are thinking of combining Xtend and Gainz to provide you with the required nutrients. How many servings of each should you combine to obtain a week's supply that meets your trainer's specifications at the least cost? (If an answer does not exist, enter DNE.)
servings of xtend servings of gainz
Chapter 11 Solutions
MyLab Statistics with Pearson eText -- Standalone Access Card -- for Essentials of Statistics
Ch. 11.1 - Cybersecurity The table below lists leading digits...Ch. 11.1 - 2. Cybersecurity When using the data from Exercise...Ch. 11.1 - Cybersecurity The accompanying Statdisk results...Ch. 11.1 - Cybersecurity What do the results from the...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...
Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - In Exercises 520, conduct the hypothesis test and...Ch. 11.1 - Ben fords Law. According to Benfords law, a...Ch. 11.1 - Ben fords Law. According to Benfords law, a...Ch. 11.1 - Ben fords Law. According to Benfords law, a...Ch. 11.1 - Ben fords Law. According to Benfords law, a...Ch. 11.1 - Assumed mid-point x=fxn=39825180=221.25...Ch. 11.2 - Handedness and Cell Phone Use The accompanying...Ch. 11.2 - Ear Preference for Cell Phone Use 2. Hypotheses...Ch. 11.2 - Hypothesis Test The accompanying TI-83/84 Plus...Ch. 11.2 - Right-Tailed, Left-Tailed, Two-Tailed Is the...Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 5BSCCh. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 6. Splint...Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 7....Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 8BSCCh. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 9. Four...Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 10....Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 11....Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 12. Nurse...Ch. 11.2 - Soccer Strategy In soccer, serious fouls in the...Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, lest the given claim. 14. Is...Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 518, test the given claim. 15....Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 16....Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 17BSCCh. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, test the given claim. 18....Ch. 11.2 - In Exercises 5-18, lest the given claim. 19. Car...Ch. 11.2 - Is the Home Field Advantage Independent of the...Ch. 11.2 - Equivalent Tests A X2 test involving a 2 2 table...Ch. 11.2 - Using Yatess Correction for Continuity The...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 1-4, use the following listed arrival...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 1-4, use the following listed arrival...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 1-4, use the following listed arrival...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 1-4, use the following listed arrival...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 5-16, use analysis of variance for...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 5-16, use analysis of variance for...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 5-16, use analysis of variance for...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 5-16, use analysis of variance for...Ch. 11.3 - In Exercises 5-16, use analysis of variance for...Ch. 11.3 - Prob. 10BSCCh. 11.3 - Triathlon Times Jeff Parent is a statistics...Ch. 11.3 - Arsenic in Rice Listed below are amounts of...Ch. 11.3 - Prob. 13BSCCh. 11.3 - Speed Dating Listed below are attribute ratings of...Ch. 11.3 - Tukey Test A display of the Bonferroni test...Ch. 11.3 - Two-Way ANOVA The pulse rates in Table 12-3 from...Ch. 11 - Exercises 1-5 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Exercises 15 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Exercises 15 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 4CQQCh. 11 - Exercises 15 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Questions 610 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Questions 610 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Questions 6-10 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Questions 6-10 refer to the sample data in the...Ch. 11 - Motor Vehicle Fatalities The table below lists...Ch. 11 - Tooth Fillings The table below shows results from...Ch. 11 - American Idol Contestants on the TV show American...Ch. 11 - Clinical Trial of Lipitor Lipitor is the trade...Ch. 11 - Weather-Related Deaths For a recent year, the...Ch. 11 - Weather-Related Deaths Review Exercise 5 involved...Ch. 11 - Chocolate and Happiness In a survey sponsored by...Ch. 11 - Chocolate and Happiness Use the results from part...Ch. 11 - Chocolate and Happiness Use the results from part...Ch. 11 - One Big Bill or Many Smaller Bills In a study of...Ch. 11 - 6. Probability Refer to the results from the 150...Ch. 11 - Car Repair Costs Listed below are repair costs (in...Ch. 11 - Forward Grip Reach and Ergonomics When designing...Ch. 11 - Use Statdisk, Minitab, Excel, StatCrunch, a...Ch. 11 - FROM DATA TO DECISION Critical Thinking: Was...Ch. 11 - Cola Weights Data Set 26 Cola Weights and Volumes...Ch. 11 - Speed Dating Data Set 18 Speed Dating in Appendix...Ch. 11 - Author Readability Pages were randomly selected by...
Knowledge Booster
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
- I need help with this problem and an explanation of the solution for the image described below. (Statistics: Engineering Probabilities)arrow_forwardI need help with this problem and an explanation of the solution for the image described below. (Statistics: Engineering Probabilities)arrow_forwardDATA TABLE VALUES Meal Price ($) 22.78 31.90 33.89 22.77 18.04 23.29 35.28 42.38 36.88 38.55 41.68 25.73 34.19 31.75 25.24 26.32 19.57 36.57 32.97 36.83 30.17 37.29 25.37 24.71 28.79 32.83 43.00 35.23 34.76 33.06 27.73 31.89 38.47 39.42 40.72 43.92 36.51 45.25 33.51 29.17 30.54 26.74 37.93arrow_forward
- I need help with this problem and an explanation of the solution for the image described below. (Statistics: Engineering Probabilities)arrow_forwardSales personnel for Skillings Distributors submit weekly reports listing the customer contacts made during the week. A sample of 65 weekly reports showed a sample mean of 19.5 customer contacts per week. The sample standard deviation was 5.2. Provide 90% and 95% confidence intervals for the population mean number of weekly customer contacts for the sales personnel. 90% Confidence interval, to 2 decimals: ( , ) 95% Confidence interval, to 2 decimals:arrow_forwardA simple random sample of 40 items resulted in a sample mean of 25. The population standard deviation is 5. a. What is the standard error of the mean (to 2 decimals)? b. At 95% confidence, what is the margin of error (to 2 decimals)?arrow_forward
- mean trough level of the population to be 3.7 micrograms/mL. The researcher conducts a study among 93 newly diagnosed arthritis patients and finds the mean trough to be 4.1 micrograms/mL with a standard deviation of 2.4 micrograms/mL. The researcher wants to test at the 5% level of significance if the trough is different than previously reported or not. Z statistics will be used. Complete Step 5 of hypothesis testing: Conclusion. State whether or not you would reject the null hypothesis and why. Also interpret what this means (i.e. is the mean trough different from 3.7 or noarrow_forward30% of all college students major in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math). If 48 college students are randomly selected, find the probability thata. Exactly 12 of them major in STEM. b. At most 17 of them major in STEM. c. At least 12 of them major in STEM. d. Between 9 and 13 (including 9 and 13) of them major in STEM.arrow_forward7% of all Americans live in poverty. If 40 Americans are randomly selected, find the probability thata. Exactly 4 of them live in poverty. b. At most 1 of them live in poverty. c. At least 1 of them live in poverty. d. Between 2 and 9 (including 2 and 9) of them live in poverty.arrow_forward
- 48% of all violent felons in the prison system are repeat offenders. If 40 violent felons are randomly selected, find the probability that a. Exactly 18 of them are repeat offenders. b. At most 18 of them are repeat offenders. c. At least 18 of them are repeat offenders. d. Between 17 and 21 (including 17 and 21) of them are repeat offenders.arrow_forwardConsider an MA(6) model with θ1 = 0.5, θ2 = −25, θ3 = 0.125, θ4 = −0.0625, θ5 = 0.03125, and θ6 = −0.015625. Find a much simpler model that has nearly the same ψ-weights.arrow_forwardLet {Yt} be an AR(2) process of the special form Yt = φ2Yt − 2 + et. Use first principles to find the range of values of φ2 for which the process is stationary.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College Algebra (MindTap Course List)AlgebraISBN:9781305652231Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff HughesPublisher:Cengage LearningHolt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL

College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Algebra
ISBN:9781305652231
Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff Hughes
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...
Algebra
ISBN:9780547587776
Author:HOLT MCDOUGAL
Publisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL

Sampling Methods and Bias with Surveys: Crash Course Statistics #10; Author: CrashCourse;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rf-fIpB4D50;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Statistics: Sampling Methods; Author: Mathispower4u;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6ApdTvgvOs;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY