Reference no: EM13154222
1. The stem-and-leaf diagram below displays the number of vacation days taken in 1997 by a sample of
40 employees of an electronics company.
Stem Leaves
0 00123334456889 Stem unit = ten
1 000111134456
2 0000123468
3 001
4 3
Referring to the stem-and-leaf display above, what PERCENTAGE of employees took 30 or more vacation
days?
A. 10 B. 0.05 C. 5 D. 4 E. 0.10
QUESTIONS #2 THROUGH #4 USE THE DATA GIVEN BELOW.
A survey was taken to determine how much time UHD students spend doing homework per week. The random sample of UHD students resulted in the frequency distribution shown below.
Time (in hours) Frequency
0 and under 2 4
2 and under 4 6
4 and under 6 11
6 and under 8 18
8 and under 10 26
10 and under 12 5
2. The class width is:
A. 10.00 B. 2.00 C. 12.00 D. 1.99 E. 100
3. What would be the APPROXIMATE shape of the frequency histogram?
A. bell-shaped B. skewed to the right C. skewed to the left
D. bi-modal E. none of these
4. What PERCENTAGE of the students studied less than 6 hours?
A. 11 B. 70 C. 0.16 D. 30 E. 0.3
5. For a large survey of students, this graph would most likely describe:
A. Students' music preference (rock=0, opera=1)
B. Students' handed-ness (right=0, left=1)
C. Students' political parties
D. Students' heights in inches
QUESTIONS #6 THROUGH #9 USE THE DATA GIVEN BELOW.
A random sample of eleven college students were surveyed and asked what brand of laptop they use and how long the battery lasted after the last full charge:
Laptop Brand: Samsung, Dell, HP, Apple, Dell, HP, Dell, Toshiba, Dell, HP, Apple
Battery Life (hours): 9, 6, 4, 9, 6, 3, 8, 10, 9, 5, 8
Assuming this data reflects all students:
6. Assuming this data reflects all students at the college, what brand of laptop would you expect the average
or typical student to own?
A. Samsung B. HP C. Toshiba D. Apple E. Dell
7. A ____________ could be used to display the frequencies of the battery life data, and a ____________
could be used to display the frequencies of the laptop brands.
A. pie chart ; histogram B. bar chart ; stem-and-leaf display
C. histogram ; bar chart D. stem-and-leaf display ; histogram
E. histogram; stem and leaf
8. What would be the mean time the batteries lasted since the last full charge (in hours)?
A. 9 B. 8 C. 7 D. 10 E. 7.5
9. The sample standard deviation of these battery lives, rounded to the nearest hundredth, would be:
A. 2.32 B. 2.65 C. 7.00 D. 5.40 E. 2.22
QUESTIONS #10 THROUGH #13 REFER TO THE FOLLOWING EXCEL OUTPUT:
Over the last 6 months, monthly returns (%) were tracked for 4 stock funds.
FUND 1 FUND 2 FUND 3 FUND 4
January 15 15 24 23
February 12 13 15 24
March 11 10 13 24
April 18 5 9 24
May 16 19 19 22
June 11 10 13 25
FUND 1 FUND 2 FUND 3 FUND 4
Mean 13.83333333 12 15.5 23.66666667
Standard Error 1.194896555 1.966384161 2.156385865 0.421637021
Median 13.5 11.5 14 24
Mode 11 10 13 24
Standard Deviation 2.926886856 4.816637832 5.282045058 1.032795559
Sample Variance 8.566666667 23.2 27.9 1.066666667
Kurtosis -1.810019834 0.14343044 0.254750067 0.5859375
Skewness 0.388189509 0.032215919 0.71453263 -0.665669013
Range 7 14 15 3
Minimum 11 5 9 22
Maximum 18 19 24 25
Sum 83 72 93 142
Count 6 6 6 6
10. Which of these funds carries the most risk with respect to monthly returns?
A. Fund 4 B. Fund 3 C. Fund 2 D. Fund 1 E. none of these
11. Assuming an approximately normal distribution of return rates for Fund 4, we would
expect APPROXIMATELY 95% of the monthly return rates for Fund 4 to be in which of the
following intervals?
A. (20.57 , 26.77) B. (22, 25) C. (22.63, 24.70) D. (23.25 , 24.07) E. (21.6 , 25.73)
12. The 50th percentile of Fund 3's monthly returns would be ________?
A. 14 B. 15 C. 11.5 D. 13 E. 15.5
13. Consider the January monthly returns for Fund 1 and Fund 2. Relative to their own fund, which January
return had the better performance?
A. They were the same B. Fund 1 C. Fund 2 D. cannot be determined
QUESTIONS #14 AND #15 USE THE TABLE GIVEN BELOW.
The table contains the probability distribution for the number of televisions per household in the United States.
X P(X)
0 .08
1 .25
2 .38
3 .19
4 .08
5 .02
14. What is the expected number of televisions per household?
A. 2.0 B. 2.1 C. 2.5 D. 3.0 E. 2.8
15. What is the probability that a household has more than 2 televisions?
A. 0.71 B. 0.67 C. 0.38 D. 0.33 E. 0.29
QUESTIONS #16 AND #17 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
A study has shown that 30% of all students taking finance at Bellaire College fail the first exam. A random sample of 12 students taking finance at Bellaire College is selected.
16. Find the probability that less than 5 students will fail the first finance exam.
A. 0.1179 B. 0.1585 C. 0.2764 D. 0.7236 E. 0.8821
17. On average, how many students would you expect to fail the first finance exam?
A. 8.4 B. 3.6 C. 1.5 D. 1.2 E. 1.90
18. Determine P(-1.3 < Z < 0.16) for a standard normal distribution.
A. 0.3396 B. 0.4668 C. -0.4668 D. -0.5332 E. 0.9032
19. The heights of women have a normal distribution with mean μ = 64 inches and VARIANCE of σ2 = 4 inches. Let X = height of a woman and find P(X < 65).
A. 0.6915 B. 0.5000 C. 0.3085 D. 0.1915 E. none of these
QUESTIONS #20 THROUGH #22 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
The time to complete a set of homework problems has a normal distribution with mean 42 minutes and
standard deviation 9 minutes.
20. Find the probability that a randomly selected student will complete the homework problems in
less than 30 minutes.
A. 0.9082 B. 0.4082 C. 0.4032 D. 0.133 E. 0.0918
21. One would expect 10% of students to complete their homework in more than ______ minutes.
A. 55.0 B. 45.6 C. 43.4 D. 53.5 E. 1.28
22. For a random sample of 36 students, find the probability that the SAMPLE MEAN completion time is greater than 45 minutes.
A. 0.0228 B. 0.1293 C. 0.3707 D. 0.4772 E. 0.9772
QUESTIONS #23 AND #24 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
A travel agent would like to estimate confidence intervals for the average price of a hotel room during the summer in a resort community. The agent takes a random sample of 16 hotels from the community, and finds that the mean price of regular room is $115 with a sample standard deviation of $30. Assume the population of prices is normally distributed.
23. Find the lower bound (to the nearest hundredth) for a 95% confidence interval for µ.
A. 113.13 B. 102.66 C. 101.85 D. 100.30 E. 99.02
24. Suppose a 90% confidence interval for µ is (108, 122). State which of the following is a correct
interpretation of the confidence interval by completing the following: We are 90% confident that_______
A. the average price for regular room for the 16 hotels is between $108 and $122.
B. the average price for regular room for all hotels in the community is between $108 and $122.
C. the price for regular room for the 16 hotels is between $108 and $122.
D. the price for regular room for all hotels in the community is between $108 and $122.
25. A study is being planned to estimate the mean number of inches that trees will grow per year in a forest.
From previous studies, it is known that the growth is normally distributed and the population standard
deviation is 0.80 inches. The analysts wish to have 90% confidence and want the estimate to be within
0.20 inch. What size sample is needed for this study?
A. 44 B. 43.30 C. 43 D. 27 E. 7
26. An educator is interested in the average amount of time that children watch television. Fifteen children
were randomly sampled and the amount of time spent (in hours) watching TV per week is obtained.
Use the printout below to answer the following question:
TIME (hours)
15 TIME SPENT WATCHING TV
5
7 Mean 9.8666667
0 Standard Error 1.447055
9 Median 10
14 Mode 5
10 Standard Deviation 5.60442
5 Sample Variance 31.409524
11 Kurtosis -0.161054
21 Skewness 0.0701961
16 Range 21
12 Minimum 0
13 Maximum 21
8 Sum 148
2 Count 15
Confidence Level(90.0%) 2.5487127
Find the upper bound (to the nearest hundredth) of the 90% confidence interval for µ.
A. 12.70 B. 12.42 C. 11.31 D. 11.81 E. 2.55
27. A patient is tested for TB at a medical clinic. Consider the hypotheses:
Ho: The patient does not have TB Ha: The patient has TB
When does a Type I error occur?
A. The test gives a negative result (the patient does not have TB) when the patient actually has TB
B. The test gives a negative result (the patient does not have TB) when the patient does not have TB
C. The test gives a positive result (the patient has TB) when the patient actually has TB
D. The test gives a positive result (the patient has TB) when the patient does not have TB
QUESTIONS #28 THROUGH #31 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
An economist claims that the average Hispanic owned business generates revenues of less than $70,000 annually. A random survey of 10 Hispanic owned businesses revealed an average annual revenue of $58,600 with a standard deviation of $18,000. Assume a normal population. We wish to test the economist's claim, at a 10% significance level.
28. State the null and alternative hypotheses for the test.
A. H0: μ ≤ 58,600 Ha: μ > 58,600
B. H0: μ = 58,600 Ha: μ ≠ 58,600
C. H0: μ > 70,000 Ha: μ ≤ 70,000
D. H0: μ ≥ 70,000 Ha: μ < 70,000
E. H0: μ = 70,000 Ha: μ ≠ 70,000
29. Calculate the value of the test statistic.
A. -2.003 B. -0.633 C. 2.003 D. 1.372 E. 1.282
30. We would reject Ho if the test statistic is:
A. less than -1.383 B. less than -1.28 C. less than -1.372 D. greater than 1.383
E. greater than 1.645
31. Based on the data and this hypothesis test, state the conclusion at a 10% level of significance.
A. There is sufficient evidence that the average annual revenue for Hispanic owned businesses is $70,000.
B. There is sufficient evidence that the average annual revenue for Hispanic owned businesses is more than $70,000.
C. There is sufficient evidence that the average annual revenue for Hispanic owned businesses is less than $70,000.
QUESTIONS #32 THROUGH #33 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
A market research analyst believes that the average weekly household expenditure on groceries in Pearland is $125. Assume that the weekly household expenditures are normally distributed. In setting up the hypotheses to test the analyst's belief, she obtained a test statistic value of z = 1.45
32. Calculate the p-value based on normal distribution.
A. 0.4265 B. 0.1470 C. 0.0287 D. 0.0735 E. 0.0574
33. Based on the results of the hypothesis test at the 10% level of significance, which of the following is a correct conclusion?
A. There is sufficient evidence to conclude that the average weekly household expenditure on groceries in Pearland is $125.
B. There is not sufficient evidence to conclude that the average weekly household expenditure on groceries in Pearland is significantly different from $125.
C. There is sufficient evidence to conclude that the average weekly household expenditure on groceries in Pearland is significantly different from $125.
QUESTIONS #34 AND #35 PERTAIN TO THE FOLLOWING:
An academic advisor wants to predict the typical starting salary of a graduate at a top business school using the GMAT score of the school as a predictor variable. Some results from a simple linear regression of SALARY versus GMAT are shown below.
34. Predict the starting salary for a graduate who scored a 650 on the GMAT.
A. $92,040 B. $56,160 C. $59,826 D. $66,700
35. Set up the null and alternative hypotheses for testing whether GMAT is a useful predictor of SALARY.
A. Ho: ?1 = 228 vs. Ha: ?1 ? 228 B. Ho: ?1 = 0 vs. Ha: ?1 ? 0
C. Ho: ?1 ? 0 vs. Ha: ?1 > 0 D. Ho: ?1 = 228 vs. Ha: ?1 = 228
QUESTIONS #36 THROUGH #40 REFER TO THE FOLLOWING:
A professor wants to analyze the number of hours students spent online during the weekend and their scores on a test the following Monday. Part of the regression output appears below.
Coefficients Standard Error t Stat P-value
Intercept 93.97 4.52 2.77 0.050693
Hours Online -4.07 0.86 -4.73 0.008048
R Square 0.69105342
36. Interpret the SLOPE of the least squares line.
A. For every additional hour spent online, the predicted test score increases by 93.97 points, on average.
B. For every additional hour spent online, the predicted test score decreases by 4.07 points, on average
C. For every additional hour spent online, the predicted test score increases by 4.52 points, on average.
D. For every 1 point increase in test score, the predicted time spent online decreases by 4.07 hrs, on average
E. For every 1 point increase in test score, the predicted time spent online increases by 93. min. on average.
37. Determine the value of the test statistic that the manager used to test whether test score is a useful
predictor of performance.
A. -4.73 B. 4.52 C. 93.97 D. 2.77 E. -4.07
38. At the .05 level, the professor could conclude that the time spent online by students over the weekend is a
useful predictor of test scores the following Monday.
A. TRUE
B. FALSE
39. What is the least squares regression equation?
A. B.
C. D.
40. _________________is the percentage of variation in performance explained by test score.
A. 93.974% B. 86% C. 4.07% D. 69.11% E. 0.69%