Bundle: Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences, Loose-leaf Version, 9th + WebAssign Printed Access Card, Multi-Term Courses
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780357099797
Author: DEVORE, Jay L.
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Textbook Question
Chapter 3.1, Problem 3E
Using the experiment in Example 3.3, define two more random variables and list the possible values of each.
Expert Solution & Answer
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Students have asked these similar questions
4. (5 pts) Conduct a chi-square contingency test (test of independence) to assess whether
there is an association between the behavior of the elderly person (did not stop to talk,
did stop to talk) and their likelihood of falling. Below, please state your null and
alternative hypotheses, calculate your expected values and write them in the table,
compute the test statistic, test the null by comparing your test statistic to the critical
value in Table A (p. 713-714) of your textbook and/or estimating the P-value, and
provide your conclusions in written form. Make sure to show your work.
Did not stop walking to talk
Stopped walking to talk
Suffered a fall
12
11
Totals
23
Did not suffer a fall | 2
Totals
35
37
14
46
60
T
Question 2
Parts manufactured by an injection molding process are subjected to a compressive strength test. Twenty samples
of five parts each are collected, and the compressive strengths (in psi) are shown in Table 2.
Table 2: Strength Data for Question 2
Sample Number
x1
x2
23
x4
x5
R
1
83.0
2
88.6 78.3 78.8
3
85.7
75.8
84.3
81.2 78.7 75.7 77.0
71.0 84.2
81.0
79.1
7.3
80.2 17.6
75.2
80.4
10.4
4
80.8
74.4
82.5
74.1 75.7 77.5
8.4
5
83.4
78.4
82.6 78.2
78.9
80.3
5.2
File Preview
6
75.3
79.9
87.3 89.7
81.8
82.8
14.5
7
74.5
78.0 80.8
73.4
79.7
77.3
7.4
8
79.2
84.4 81.5 86.0
74.5
81.1
11.4
9
80.5
86.2
76.2 64.1
80.2
81.4
9.9
10
75.7
75.2
71.1 82.1
74.3
75.7
10.9
11
80.0 81.5
78.4 73.8
78.1
78.4
7.7
12
80.6
81.8
79.3
73.8
81.7 79.4
8.0
13
82.7
81.3
79.1
82.0 79.5 80.9
3.6
14
79.2
74.9
78.6 77.7
75.3
77.1
4.3
15
85.5 82.1
82.8 73.4
71.7
79.1
13.8
16
78.8 79.6
80.2 79.1
80.8 79.7
2.0
17
82.1
78.2
18
84.5
76.9
75.5
83.5 81.2
19
79.0 77.8
20
84.5
73.1
78.2 82.1
79.2 81.1 7.6
81.2 84.4 81.6 80.8…
Name:
Lab Time:
Quiz 7 & 8 (Take Home) - due Wednesday, Feb. 26
Contingency Analysis (Ch. 9)
In lab 5, part 3, you will create a mosaic plot and conducted a chi-square contingency test to
evaluate whether elderly patients who did not stop walking to talk (vs. those who did stop)
were more likely to suffer a fall in the next six months. I have tabulated the data below.
Answer the questions below. Please show your calculations on this or a separate sheet.
Did not stop walking to talk
Stopped walking to talk Totals
Suffered a fall
Did not suffer a fall
Totals
12
11
23
2
35
37
14
14
46
60
Quiz 7:
1. (2 pts) Compute the odds of falling for each group. Compute the odds ratio for those
who did not stop walking vs. those who did stop walking. Interpret your result verbally.
Chapter 3 Solutions
Bundle: Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences, Loose-leaf Version, 9th + WebAssign Printed Access Card, Multi-Term Courses
Ch. 3.1 - A concrete beam may fail either by shear (S) or...Ch. 3.1 - Using the experiment in Example 3.3, define two...Ch. 3.1 - Let X = the number of nonzero digits in a randomly...Ch. 3.1 - If the sample space S is an infinite set, does...Ch. 3.1 - Starting at a fixed time, each car entering an...Ch. 3.1 - For each random variable defined here, describe...Ch. 3.1 - Each time a component is tested, the trial is a...Ch. 3.1 - An individual named Claudius is located at the...Ch. 3.1 - The number of pumps in use at both a six-pump...Ch. 3.2 - Let X be the number of students who show up for a...
Ch. 3.2 - Airlines sometimes overbook flights. Suppose that...Ch. 3.2 - A mail-order computer business has six telephone...Ch. 3.2 - A contractor is required by a county planning...Ch. 3.2 - Many manufacturers have quality control programs...Ch. 3.2 - Some parts of California are particularly...Ch. 3.2 - A now batterys voltage may be acceptable (A) or...Ch. 3.2 - Two fair six-sided dice are tossed independently....Ch. 3.2 - A library subscribes to two different weekly news...Ch. 3.2 - Three couples and two single individuals have been...Ch. 3.2 - Suppose that you read through this years issues of...Ch. 3.2 - Refer to Exercise 13, and calculate and graph the...Ch. 3.2 - A branch of a certain bank in New York City has...Ch. 3.2 - An insurance company offers its policyholders a...Ch. 3.2 - In Example 3.12, let Y = the number of girls born...Ch. 3.2 - Alvie Singer lives at 0 in the accompanying...Ch. 3.2 - After all students have left the classroom, a...Ch. 3.2 - Show that the cdf F(x) is a nondecreasing...Ch. 3.3 - The pmf of the amount of memory X(GB) in a...Ch. 3.3 - An individual who has automobile insurance from a...Ch. 3.3 - Refer to Exercise 12 and calculate V(Y) and Y....Ch. 3.3 - A certain brand of upright freezer is available in...Ch. 3.3 - Let X be a Bernoulli rv with pmf as in Example...Ch. 3.3 - Suppose that the number of plants of a particular...Ch. 3.3 - A small market orders copies of a certain magazine...Ch. 3.3 - Let X be the damage incurred (in ) in a certain...Ch. 3.3 - The n candidates for a job have been ranked 1, 2,...Ch. 3.3 - Possible values of X, the number of components in...Ch. 3.3 - A chemical supply company currently has in stock...Ch. 3.3 - a. Draw a line graph of the pmf of X in Exercise...Ch. 3.3 - Use the definition in Expression (3.13) to prove...Ch. 3.3 - Suppose E(X) = 5 and E[X(X - 1)] = 27.5. What is...Ch. 3.3 - Write a general rule for E(X c) where c is a...Ch. 3.3 - A result called Chebyshevs inequality states that...Ch. 3.3 - If a X b, show that a E(X) b.Ch. 3.4 - Compute the following binomial probabilities...Ch. 3.4 - The article Should You Report That Fender-Bender?...Ch. 3.4 - NBC News reported on May 2. 2013. that 1 in 20...Ch. 3.4 - A company that produces fine crystal knows from...Ch. 3.4 - A particular telephone number is used to receive...Ch. 3.4 - Refer to the previous exercise. a. What is the...Ch. 3.4 - Suppose that 30% of all students who have to buy a...Ch. 3.4 - Exercise 30 (Section 3.3) gave the pmf of Y, the...Ch. 3.4 - A particular type of tennis racket comes in a...Ch. 3.4 - Twenty percent of all telephones of a certain type...Ch. 3.4 - The College Board reports that 2% of the 2 million...Ch. 3.4 - A certain type of flashlight requires two type-D...Ch. 3.4 - A very large batch of components has arrived at a...Ch. 3.4 - An ordinance requiring that a smoke detector be...Ch. 3.4 - A toll bridge charges 1.00 for passenger cars and...Ch. 3.4 - A student who is trying to write a paper for a...Ch. 3.4 - a. For fixed n, are there values of p(0 p 1) for...Ch. 3.4 - a. Show that b(x; n, 1 p) = b(n x; n, p). b....Ch. 3.4 - Show that E(X) = np when X is a binomial random...Ch. 3.4 - Customers at a gas station pay with a credit card...Ch. 3.4 - An airport limousine can accommodate up to four...Ch. 3.4 - Refer to Chebyshevs inequality given in Exercise...Ch. 3.5 - Eighteen individuals are scheduled to take a...Ch. 3.5 - Each of 12 refrigerators of a certain type has...Ch. 3.5 - An instructor who taught two sections of...Ch. 3.5 - A geologist has collected 10 specimens of basaltic...Ch. 3.5 - A personnel director interviewing 11 senior...Ch. 3.5 - Twenty pairs of individuals playing in a bridge...Ch. 3.5 - A second-stage smog alert has been called in a...Ch. 3.5 - The probability that a randomly selected box of a...Ch. 3.5 - A family decides to have children until it has...Ch. 3.5 - Three brothers and their wives decide to have...Ch. 3.5 - According to the article Characterizing the...Ch. 3.6 - The article Expectation Analysis of the...Ch. 3.6 - Let X be the number of material anomalies...Ch. 3.6 - Suppose that the number of drivers who travel...Ch. 3.6 - Consider writing onto a computer disk and then...Ch. 3.6 - An article in the Los Angeles Times (Dec. 3. 1993)...Ch. 3.6 - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention...Ch. 3.6 - Suppose small aircraft arrive at a certain airport...Ch. 3.6 - Organisms are present in ballast water discharged...Ch. 3.6 - The number of requests for assistance received by...Ch. 3.6 - In proof testing of circuit boards, the...Ch. 3.6 - The article Reliability-Based Service-Life...Ch. 3.6 - Let X have a Poisson distribution with parameter ....Ch. 3.6 - Suppose that trees are distributed in a forest...Ch. 3.6 - Automobiles arrive at a vehicle equipment...Ch. 3.6 - a. In a Poisson process, what has to happen in...Ch. 3 - Consider a deck consisting of seven cards, marked...Ch. 3 - After shuffling a deck of 52 cards, a dealer deals...Ch. 3 - The negative binomial rv X was defined as the...Ch. 3 - Of all customers purchasing automatic garage-door...Ch. 3 - In some applications the distribution of a...Ch. 3 - A k-out-of-n system is one that will function if...Ch. 3 - A manufacturer of integrated circuit chips wishes...Ch. 3 - Of the people passing through an airport metal...Ch. 3 - An educational consulting firm is trying to decide...Ch. 3 - Consider a disease whose presence can be...Ch. 3 - Let p1 denote the probability that any particular...Ch. 3 - The purchaser of a power-generating unit requires...Ch. 3 - A plan for an executive travelers club has been...Ch. 3 - Forty percent of seeds from maize (modern-day com)...Ch. 3 - A trial has just resulted in a hung jury because...Ch. 3 - A reservation service employs five information...Ch. 3 - Grasshoppers arc distributed at random in a large...Ch. 3 - A newsstand has ordered five copies of a certain...Ch. 3 - Individuals A and B begin to play a sequence of...Ch. 3 - A test for the presence of a certain disease has...Ch. 3 - Prob. 114SECh. 3 - There are two Certified Public Accountants in a...Ch. 3 - The mode of a discrete random variable X with pmf...Ch. 3 - A computer disk storage device has ten concentric...Ch. 3 - If X is a hypergeometric rv, show directly from...Ch. 3 - Prob. 119SECh. 3 - Prob. 120SECh. 3 - Prob. 121SECh. 3 - Prob. 122SE
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