
Concept explainers
A bookstore at the Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta sells reading materials (paperback books, newspapers, magazines) as well as snacks (peanuts, pretzels, candy, etc.). A point-of-sale terminal collects a variety of information about customer purchases. Shown below is a table showing the number of snack items and the number of items of reading material purchased by the most recent 600 customers.
0 | Reading Material 1 |
2 | ||
0 | 0 | 60 | 18 | |
Snacks | 1 | 240 | 90 | 30 |
2 | 120 | 30 | 12 |
- a. Using the data in the table construct an empirical discrete bivariate
probability distribution for x = number of snack items and y = number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase. what is the probability of a customer purchase consisting of one item of reading materials and two snack items? what is the probability of a customer purchasing one snack item only? why is the probability f(x = 0, y = 0) = 0? - b. Show the marginal probability distribution for the number of snack items purchased. Compute the
expected value and variance. - c. What is the expected value and variance for the number of reading materials purchased by a customer?
- d. Show the probability distribution for t = total number of items in a customer purchase. Compute its expected value and variance.
Compute the
a.

Develop an empirical bivariate probability distribution for number of snack items and the number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase.
Find the probability of a customer purchase consisting of one item of reading materials and two snack items, probability of a customer purchasing one snack item and to explain why the probability,
Answer to Problem 62SE
The empirical bivariate probability distribution for number of snack items and the number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase is as follows:
Reading material (y) | |||||
0 | 1 | 2 | Total | ||
Snacks | 0 | 0.00 | 0.10 | 0.03 | 0.13 |
1 | 0.40 | 0.15 | 0.05 | 0.60 | |
2 | 0.20 | 0.05 | 0.02 | 0.27 | |
Total | 0.60 | 0.30 | 0.10 | 1.00 |
The probability of a customer purchase consisting of one item of reading materials and two snack items is 0.05.
The probability of a customer purchasing one snack item is 0.40.
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
The table represents the number of snack items and the number of items of reading material purchased by 600 customers. The random variable x represents the number of snack items and the random variable y represents the number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase.
The bivariate distribution is obtained by dividing each frequency in the table by the total number of customers. The probability of a customer purchasing 1 item of reading material and 1 item of snacks is,
Similarly other bivariate probabilities are obtained and given in the following table:
Reading material (y) | |||||
0 | 1 | 2 | Total | ||
Snacks(x) | 0 | ||||
1 | |||||
2 | |||||
Total | 1.00 |
The marginal probability distribution for the random variable x is in the rightmost column and the marginal probability distribution for the random variable y is in the bottom row.
Thus, the bivariate probability distribution for number of snack items and the number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase is obtained.
From the bivariate probability distribution table, the probability of a customer purchase consisting of one item of reading materials and two snack items is given by,
Thus, the probability of a customer purchase consisting of one item of reading materials and two snack items is 0.05.
From the bivariate probability distribution table, the probability of a customer purchase one snack item is given by,
Thus, the probability of a customer purchasing one snack item is 0.40.
The point sale terminal is only used when someone makes a purchase. Thus, the probability value,
b.

Show the marginal probability distribution for the number of snack items purchased and compute its expected value and variance.
Answer to Problem 62SE
The marginal probability distribution for the number of snack items purchased is:
x | f(x) |
0 | 0.13 |
1 | 0.60 |
2 | 0.27 |
The expected value for the number of snack items purchased is 1.14.
The variance for the number of snack items purchased is 0.3804.
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
The marginal distribution for the number of snack items purchased is the values of the random variable x and the corresponding probabilities. This values are obtained from the rightmost column of the bivariate probability distribution for number of snack items and the number of reading materials in a randomly selected customer purchase obtained in part (a).
The marginal distribution of parts cost is given in the following table:
x | f(x) |
0 | 0.13 |
1 | 0.60 |
2 | 0.27 |
Thus, the marginal distribution of parts cost is obtained.
The expected value of the discrete random variable:
The formula for the expected value of a discrete random variable is,
The expected value for the random variable x is obtained in the following table:
x | f(x) | |
0 | 0.13 | 0.00 |
1 | 0.60 | 0.60 |
2 | 0.27 | 0.54 |
Total | 1.00 | 1.14 |
Thus, the expected value for the random variable x is 1.14.
The formula for the variance of the discrete random variable x is,
The variance of the random variable x is obtained using the following table:
x | f(x ) | |||
0 | 0.13 | –1.14 | 1.2996 | 0.16895 |
1 | 0.60 | –0.14 | 0.0196 | 0.01176 |
2 | 0.27 | 0.86 | 0.7396 | 0.19969 |
Total | 1.00 | –0.42 | 2.0588 | 0.3804 |
Therefore,
Thus, the variance of the random variable x is 0.3804.
c.

Compute the expected value and variance for the number of reading materials purchased by a customer.
Answer to Problem 62SE
The expected value for the number of reading materials purchased is 0.50.
The variance for the number of reading materials purchased is 0.45.
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
The expected value of the discrete random variable:
The formula for the expected value of a discrete random variable is,
The expected value for the random variable y is obtained in the following table:
y | f(y) | |
0 | 0.60 | 0.0 |
1 | 0.30 | 0.30 |
2 | 0.10 | 0.2 |
Total | 1.0 | 0.5 |
Thus, the expected value for the random variable y is 0.5.
The formula for the variance of the discrete random variable y is,
The variance of the random variable y is obtained using the following table:
y | f(y) | |||
0 | 0.60 | –0.5 | 0.25 | 0.15 |
1 | 0.30 | 0.5 | 0.25 | 0.075 |
2 | 0.10 | 1.5 | 2.25 | 0.225 |
Total | 1.00 | 0.45 |
Therefore,
Thus, the variance of the random variable y is 0.45.
That is, the expected value for the number of reading materials purchased is 0.50 and the variance is 0.45.
d.

Show the probability distribution for total number of items in a customer purchase and to compute its expected value and variance.
Answer to Problem 62SE
The probability distribution for total number of items in a customer purchase is given below:
t | f(t) |
1 | 0.50 |
2 | 0.38 |
3 | 0.10 |
4 | 0.02 |
The expected number of items purchased is 1.64.
The variance for the total number of items purchased is 0.5504.
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
The total number of items purchased is represented using the random variable t. the random variable t take the value 1 when
Substitute the values from the bivariate probability distribution table in part (a),
Similarly, other probability values can be obtained. Thus, the probability distribution for the random variable t is:
f(t) | |
1 | 0.50 |
2 | 0.38 |
3 | 0.10 |
4 | 0.02 |
e.

Compute the covariance and correlation coefficient between x and y.
Identify the relationship between the number of reading materials and the number of snacks purchased on a customer visit.
Answer to Problem 62SE
The covariance of x and y is –0.14 and the correlation coefficient is –0.3384.
There is a negative correlation between the number of reading materials and the number of snacks purchased on a customer visit.
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
Covariance for the random variables x and y is given by,
Substitute the values,
Correlation between the random variables x and y is given by,
The standard deviation is obtained by taking the square root of variance.
Substitute the values in the correlation formula,
The covariance of x and y is –0.14 and the correlation coefficient is –0.3384.
Thus, correlation coefficient of x and y is –0.3384 which is negative. Thus, there is a negative correlation between the number of reading materials and the number of snacks purchased on a customer visit. That is, as the purchase of reading materials increase the number of snack items purchased decreases.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 5 Solutions
Essentials of Statistics for Business and Economics, Loose-leaf Version
- You find out that the dietary scale you use each day is off by a factor of 2 ounces (over — at least that’s what you say!). The margin of error for your scale was plus or minus 0.5 ounces before you found this out. What’s the margin of error now?arrow_forwardSuppose that Sue and Bill each make a confidence interval out of the same data set, but Sue wants a confidence level of 80 percent compared to Bill’s 90 percent. How do their margins of error compare?arrow_forwardSuppose that you conduct a study twice, and the second time you use four times as many people as you did the first time. How does the change affect your margin of error? (Assume the other components remain constant.)arrow_forward
- Out of a sample of 200 babysitters, 70 percent are girls, and 30 percent are guys. What’s the margin of error for the percentage of female babysitters? Assume 95 percent confidence.What’s the margin of error for the percentage of male babysitters? Assume 95 percent confidence.arrow_forwardYou sample 100 fish in Pond A at the fish hatchery and find that they average 5.5 inches with a standard deviation of 1 inch. Your sample of 100 fish from Pond B has the same mean, but the standard deviation is 2 inches. How do the margins of error compare? (Assume the confidence levels are the same.)arrow_forwardA survey of 1,000 dental patients produces 450 people who floss their teeth adequately. What’s the margin of error for this result? Assume 90 percent confidence.arrow_forward
- The annual aggregate claim amount of an insurer follows a compound Poisson distribution with parameter 1,000. Individual claim amounts follow a Gamma distribution with shape parameter a = 750 and rate parameter λ = 0.25. 1. Generate 20,000 simulated aggregate claim values for the insurer, using a random number generator seed of 955.Display the first five simulated claim values in your answer script using the R function head(). 2. Plot the empirical density function of the simulated aggregate claim values from Question 1, setting the x-axis range from 2,600,000 to 3,300,000 and the y-axis range from 0 to 0.0000045. 3. Suggest a suitable distribution, including its parameters, that approximates the simulated aggregate claim values from Question 1. 4. Generate 20,000 values from your suggested distribution in Question 3 using a random number generator seed of 955. Use the R function head() to display the first five generated values in your answer script. 5. Plot the empirical density…arrow_forwardFind binomial probability if: x = 8, n = 10, p = 0.7 x= 3, n=5, p = 0.3 x = 4, n=7, p = 0.6 Quality Control: A factory produces light bulbs with a 2% defect rate. If a random sample of 20 bulbs is tested, what is the probability that exactly 2 bulbs are defective? (hint: p=2% or 0.02; x =2, n=20; use the same logic for the following problems) Marketing Campaign: A marketing company sends out 1,000 promotional emails. The probability of any email being opened is 0.15. What is the probability that exactly 150 emails will be opened? (hint: total emails or n=1000, x =150) Customer Satisfaction: A survey shows that 70% of customers are satisfied with a new product. Out of 10 randomly selected customers, what is the probability that at least 8 are satisfied? (hint: One of the keyword in this question is “at least 8”, it is not “exactly 8”, the correct formula for this should be = 1- (binom.dist(7, 10, 0.7, TRUE)). The part in the princess will give you the probability of seven and less than…arrow_forwardplease answer these questionsarrow_forward
- Selon une économiste d’une société financière, les dépenses moyennes pour « meubles et appareils de maison » ont été moins importantes pour les ménages de la région de Montréal, que celles de la région de Québec. Un échantillon aléatoire de 14 ménages pour la région de Montréal et de 16 ménages pour la région Québec est tiré et donne les données suivantes, en ce qui a trait aux dépenses pour ce secteur d’activité économique. On suppose que les données de chaque population sont distribuées selon une loi normale. Nous sommes intéressé à connaitre si les variances des populations sont égales.a) Faites le test d’hypothèse sur deux variances approprié au seuil de signification de 1 %. Inclure les informations suivantes : i. Hypothèse / Identification des populationsii. Valeur(s) critique(s) de Fiii. Règle de décisioniv. Valeur du rapport Fv. Décision et conclusion b) A partir des résultats obtenus en a), est-ce que l’hypothèse d’égalité des variances pour cette…arrow_forwardAccording to an economist from a financial company, the average expenditures on "furniture and household appliances" have been lower for households in the Montreal area than those in the Quebec region. A random sample of 14 households from the Montreal region and 16 households from the Quebec region was taken, providing the following data regarding expenditures in this economic sector. It is assumed that the data from each population are distributed normally. We are interested in knowing if the variances of the populations are equal. a) Perform the appropriate hypothesis test on two variances at a significance level of 1%. Include the following information: i. Hypothesis / Identification of populations ii. Critical F-value(s) iii. Decision rule iv. F-ratio value v. Decision and conclusion b) Based on the results obtained in a), is the hypothesis of equal variances for this socio-economic characteristic measured in these two populations upheld? c) Based on the results obtained in a),…arrow_forwardA major company in the Montreal area, offering a range of engineering services from project preparation to construction execution, and industrial project management, wants to ensure that the individuals who are responsible for project cost estimation and bid preparation demonstrate a certain uniformity in their estimates. The head of civil engineering and municipal services decided to structure an experimental plan to detect if there could be significant differences in project evaluation. Seven projects were selected, each of which had to be evaluated by each of the two estimators, with the order of the projects submitted being random. The obtained estimates are presented in the table below. a) Complete the table above by calculating: i. The differences (A-B) ii. The sum of the differences iii. The mean of the differences iv. The standard deviation of the differences b) What is the value of the t-statistic? c) What is the critical t-value for this test at a significance level of 1%?…arrow_forward
- Algebra: Structure And Method, Book 1AlgebraISBN:9780395977224Author:Richard G. Brown, Mary P. Dolciani, Robert H. Sorgenfrey, William L. ColePublisher:McDougal LittellMathematics For Machine TechnologyAdvanced MathISBN:9781337798310Author:Peterson, John.Publisher:Cengage Learning,Holt Mcdougal Larson Pre-algebra: Student Edition...AlgebraISBN:9780547587776Author:HOLT MCDOUGALPublisher:HOLT MCDOUGAL
- College Algebra (MindTap Course List)AlgebraISBN:9781305652231Author:R. David Gustafson, Jeff HughesPublisher:Cengage LearningElementary Geometry for College StudentsGeometryISBN:9781285195698Author:Daniel C. Alexander, Geralyn M. KoeberleinPublisher:Cengage Learning





