Statistics Through Applications
Statistics Through Applications
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781429219747
Author: Daren S. Starnes, David Moore, Dan Yates
Publisher: Macmillan Higher Education
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Question
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Chapter 9.2, Problem 9.21E

a)

To determine

To find the mean and standard deviation of the proportion p^ .

a)

Expert Solution
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Answer to Problem 9.21E

Mean = 0.5 and standard deviation = 0.1

Explanation of Solution

Given:

Sample size = n = 25

Formula:

Mean:

  μp^=p

Standard deviation:

  σp^=p(1p)n

Calculation:

A standard deck of cards contains 52 cards, of which 26 are red and 26 are black, 13 are of each suit (hearts, diamonds, spades, clubs) and of which 4 are of each denomination (A, 2 to 10, J. Q, K). The face cards are the jacks J. queens Q and kings K. Therefore, 26 of the 52 cards in the deck are red.

So, the probability is the number of favorable outcomes divided by the number of possible outcomes

  =2652=0.5

Sample proportion = p^ = 0.5

The mean = μp^=p=0.5

The standard deviation:

  σp^=0.5(10.5)250.1

b)

To determine

To find proportion p^ if red cards are 16.

b)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 9.21E

Sample proportion = 0.64

Explanation of Solution

Given:

  x=16

Formula:

  p^=xn

Calculation:

Using the formula,

  p^=1625=0.64

c)

To determine

To sketch the graph for part b)

c)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Given:

  p^=0.64

Calculation:

Following is the graph which shows sampling distribution of sample proportion = 0.64:

Statistics Through Applications, Chapter 9.2, Problem 9.21E

d)

To determine

To explain how likely is it that you would get a value of 19 as unusual as the one you did if the deck is fair.

d)

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Given:

  p^=0.64

Population proportion = p = 0.5

Formula:

  z=p^pp(1p)n

Calculation:

First need to find z-score:

  z=0.640.50.5(10.5)25=1.40

Therefore,

  P(p^>0.64)=P(Z>1.40)P(p^>0.64)=1P(Z<1.40)P(p^>0.64)=10.9192=0.0808

Using excel formula, =NORMSDIST(1.4)

Hence, the sample proportion of 0.64 is likely to occur by chance as probability is more than 0.05. Thus, deck does not indeed appear to be fair.

Chapter 9 Solutions

Statistics Through Applications

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