Concept explainers
A sample of size 5 will be drawn from a normal population with
Is it appropriate to use the
If appropriate find the
If appropriate find the 80th percentile of
a.
To explain whether to use the normal distribution is appropriate or not.
Answer to Problem 17E
Yes can be used normal distributions.
Explanation of Solution
Given:
In here, mean
Let’s why the normal distribution is useful.
Many things are normally distributed, or very close to it. For example, height and intelligence are approximately normally distributed; measurement errors also often have a normal distribution.
The normal distribution is easy to work with mathematically. In many practical cases, the methods developed using normal theory work quite well even when the distribution is not normal.
There is a very strong connection between the size of a sample N and the extent to which a sampling distribution approaches the normal form. Many sampling distributions based on large N can be approximated by the normal distribution even though the population distribution itself is not normal.
b.
The probability of
Answer to Problem 17E
Explanation of Solution
Given:
Here
Calculation:
According to the rule of probability, the percentage of data lying between values
The percentage of data lying above 50 is denoted
Under the normal
Consider the distribution
Apply the rule of probability
Conclusion:
The probability that
c.
The values lie in the lower 80% of the data.
Answer to Problem 17E
Explanation of Solution
Calculation:
Need to find the
Conclude that the lower80% of this distributions is formed by values below
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 7 Solutions
Loose Leaf Version For Elementary Statistics
- 19. Let X be a non-negative random variable. Show that lim nE (IX >n)) = 0. E lim (x)-0. = >arrow_forward(c) Utilize Fubini's Theorem to demonstrate that E(X)= = (1- F(x))dx.arrow_forward(c) Describe the positive and negative parts of a random variable. How is the integral defined for a general random variable using these components?arrow_forward
- 26. (a) Provide an example where X, X but E(X,) does not converge to E(X).arrow_forward(b) Demonstrate that if X and Y are independent, then it follows that E(XY) E(X)E(Y);arrow_forward(d) Under what conditions do we say that a random variable X is integrable, specifically when (i) X is a non-negative random variable and (ii) when X is a general random variable?arrow_forward
- Glencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897...AlgebraISBN:9780079039897Author:CarterPublisher:McGraw HillBig Ideas Math A Bridge To Success Algebra 1: Stu...AlgebraISBN:9781680331141Author:HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURTPublisher:Houghton Mifflin Harcourt