
Essentials of Statistics for Business and Economics, Loose-leaf Version
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781337114196
Author: David R. Anderson, Dennis J. Sweeney, Thomas A. Williams, Jeffrey D. Camm, James J. Cochran
Publisher: South-Western College Pub
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4.2, Problem 20E
Junior Achievement USA and the Allstate Foundation surveyed teenagers aged 14 to 18 and asked at what age they think that they will become financially independent (USA Today, April 30, 2012). The responses of 944 teenagers who answered this survey question are as follows.
Age Financially Independent | Number of Responses |
16 to 20 | 191 |
21 to 24 | 467 |
25 to 27 | 244 |
28 or older | 42 |
Consider the experiment of randomly selecting a teenager from the population of teenagers aged 14 to 18.
- a. Compute the
probability of being financially independent for each of the four age categories. - b. What is the probability of being financially independent before the age of 25?
- c. What is the probability of being financially independent after the age of 24?
- d. Do the probabilities suggest that the teenagers may be somewhat unrealistic in their expectations about when they will become financially independent?
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Pam, Rob and Sam get a cake that is one-third chocolate, one-third vanilla, and one-third strawberry as shown below. They wish to fairly divide the cake using the lone chooser method. Pam likes strawberry twice as much as chocolate or vanilla. Rob only likes chocolate. Sam, the chooser, likes vanilla and strawberry twice as much as chocolate. In the first division, Pam cuts the strawberry piece off and lets Rob choose his favorite piece. Based on that, Rob chooses the chocolate and vanilla parts. Note: All cuts made to the cake shown below are vertical.Which is a second division that Rob would make of his share of the cake?
Three players (one divider and two choosers) are going to divide a cake fairly using the lone divider method. The divider cuts the cake into three slices (s1, s2, and s3).
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Chapter 4 Solutions
Essentials of Statistics for Business and Economics, Loose-leaf Version
Ch. 4.1 - 1. An experiment has three steps with three...Ch. 4.1 - 2. How many ways can three items be selected from...Ch. 4.1 - How many permutations of three items can be...Ch. 4.1 - 4. Consider the experiment of tossing a coin three...Ch. 4.1 - 5. Suppose an experiment has five equally likely...Ch. 4.1 - An experiment with three outcomes has been...Ch. 4.1 - A decision maker subjectively assigned the...Ch. 4.1 - In the city of Milford, applications for zoning...Ch. 4.1 - Simple random sampling uses a sample of size n...Ch. 4.1 - Prob. 10E
Ch. 4.1 - The National Occupant Protection Use Survey...Ch. 4.1 - 12. The Powerball lottery is played twice each...Ch. 4.1 - A company that manufactures toothpaste is studying...Ch. 4.2 - An experiment has four equally likely outcomes:...Ch. 4.2 - 15. Consider the experiment of selecting a playing...Ch. 4.2 - Consider the experiment of rolling a pair of dice....Ch. 4.2 - Refer to the KPL sample points and sample point...Ch. 4.2 - 18. Fortune magazine publishes an annual list of...Ch. 4.2 - 19. Do you think global warming will have an...Ch. 4.2 - Junior Achievement USA and the Allstate Foundation...Ch. 4.2 - 21. Data on U.S. work-related fatalities by cause...Ch. 4.3 - Suppose that we have a sample space with five...Ch. 4.3 - 23. Suppose that we have a sample space S = {E1,...Ch. 4.3 - Clarkson University surveyed alumni to learn more...Ch. 4.3 - 25. The Eco Pulse survey from the marketing...Ch. 4.3 - 26. Information about mutual funds provided by...Ch. 4.3 - 27. What NCAA college basketball conferences have...Ch. 4.3 - A survey of magazine subscribers showed that 45.8%...Ch. 4.3 - High school seniors with strong academic records...Ch. 4.4 - 30. Suppose that we have two events, A and B, with...Ch. 4.4 - 31. Assume that we have two events, A and B, that...Ch. 4.4 - Prob. 32ECh. 4.4 - 33. Students taking the Graduate Management...Ch. 4.4 - The bureau of Transportation Statistics reports...Ch. 4.4 - 35. To better understand how husbands and wives...Ch. 4.4 - 36. Jamal Crawford of the National Basketball...Ch. 4.4 - 37. A joint survey by Parade magazine and Yahoo!...Ch. 4.4 - The Institute for Higher Education Policy, a...Ch. 4.5 - The prior probabilities for events A1 and A2 are...Ch. 4.5 - 40. The prior probabilities for events A1, A2, and...Ch. 4.5 - 41. A consulting firm submitted a bid for a large...Ch. 4.5 - A local bank reviewed its credit card policy with...Ch. 4.5 - 43. In August 2012, tropical storm Isaac formed in...Ch. 4.5 - ParFore created a website to market golf equipment...Ch. 4.5 - 45. The percentage of adult users of the Internet...Ch. 4 - A survey of adults aged 18 and older conducted by...Ch. 4 - 47. A financial manager made two new...Ch. 4 - 48. Forty-three percent of Americans use social...Ch. 4 - A study of 31,000 hospital admissions in New York...Ch. 4 - 50. A telephone survey to determine viewer...Ch. 4 - The U.S. Census Bureau serves as the leading...Ch. 4 - An MBA new-matriculants survey provided the...Ch. 4 - 53. Refer again to the data from the MBA...Ch. 4 - 54. In February 2012, the Pew Internet & American...Ch. 4 - 55. A large consumer goods company ran a...Ch. 4 - 56. Cooper Realty is a small real estate company...Ch. 4 - A company studied the number of lost-time...Ch. 4 - 58. According to the Open Doors Report, 9.5% of...Ch. 4 - An oil company purchased an option on land in...Ch. 4 - The five most common words appearing in spam...
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