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Test Set 11

This document contains 9 problems related to probability, statistics, and hypothesis testing. The problems cover topics such as testing claims about population means and variances, comparing two populations, and analyzing contingency tables. Hypothesis tests are conducted at various significance levels including 1%, 5%, and 10% to determine if sample data provides sufficient evidence to reject null hypotheses.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views

Test Set 11

This document contains 9 problems related to probability, statistics, and hypothesis testing. The problems cover topics such as testing claims about population means and variances, comparing two populations, and analyzing contingency tables. Hypothesis tests are conducted at various significance levels including 1%, 5%, and 10% to determine if sample data provides sufficient evidence to reject null hypotheses.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Probability and Statistics

Test Set 11
1. An electronics manufacturing company produces ICs which have lifetimes
normally distributed with mean (in days) and variance 900 days. Find the
rejection region for testing H0: = 1000 against H1: > 1000 at 1% level based
on a sample of size n. Determine the power of this test at = 1060 if n = 25.
2. An automobile manufacturer claims that the average mileage of its new two
wheeler will be at least 40 km. To verify this claim 15 test runs were conducted
independently under identical conditions and the mileages recorded (in km) as
39.1, 40.2, 38.8, 40.5, 42, 45.8, 39, 41, 46.8, 43.2, 43, 38.5, 42.1, 44 and 36. Test
the claim of the manufacturer at = 0.05.
3. The average height of girls in the first year class of IIT Kharagpur has been 162.5
cm with a standard deviation 6.9 cm. Is there a reason to believe that there has
been an increase in the average height if a random sample of 50 girls in the
present first year batch has an average height of 165.2 cm? Take = 0.01.
4. The life of certain electrical equipment is normally distributed. A random sample
of lives of twelve such equipments has a standard deviation of 1.3 years. Test the
hypothesis that the standard deviation is more than 1.2 years at 10% level of
significance.
5. A fire safety training program is claimed to be effective in reducing the loss of
lives due to fire accidents. The following data are collected concerning the
monthly loss of lives due to fire accidents in 6 suburban areas of a big city both
before and after the fire safety program is conducted.
Suburb Area
Before
After

1
15
12

2
30
26

3
20
17

4
36
36

5
27
28

6
25
26

Test the hypothesis if the claim is supported by the observed data at = 0.05.
6. Let 1 and 2 denote the mean yields by using fertilizer 1 and 2 respectively. On
the basis of random samples of size 10 from each fertilizer, the following data
were recorded: X 90.13, Y 92.70, s12 4.02, s 22 3.98. Test the hypothesis H0:
1 = 2 against H1: 1 2. at 1% and 5% levels of significance.

7. A random sample of 280 families with 4 children showed the following number of
male and female children as in the given table. Do the data justify the claim that
the probabilities of birth for male and female children?
No. of Boys(B): 4 B, 0 G 3 B, 1 G 2 B, 2 G 1 B, 3 G 0 B, 4 G
& Girls (G)
No. of families

17

69

102

74

18

8. When a new TV serial is launched, the producer wants to get a feedback from the
viewers. Random samples of 250, 200 and 350 consumers from three cities are
selected and the following data is obtained from them.

City 1
City 2
City 3
Total

Never
heard of
the serial
51
60
69
180

Heard about the serial but did saw it at least Total


not watch
once
70
71
93
234

129
69
188
386

250
200
350
800

Can we claim on the basis of the observed data that the viewers preferences differ
in the three cities? (Take = 0.1, 0.05.)
9. In a random sample of 200 families watching television in Bombay at any given
time, it was found that 45 were watching Network A. At the same time, in a
random sample of 110 families watching television in New Delhi, it was found
that 32 were watching Network A. Test the hypothesis that Network A is
equally popular in both states (at this time) at 1% level of significance.

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