Notes 2
Notes 2
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)
i)
j)
k)
l)
m)
n)
o)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Series1
Ford F-Series
Chevrolet Silverado
Dodge Ram
Ford Explorer
Toyota Camry
62
41
28
26
31
7. Decide which method of data collection you would use to collect data for the study
(observational study, experiment, simulation, or survey):
a) A study of the salaries of college professors in a particular state
b) A study where a political pollster wishes to determine if his candidate is leading in
the polls
c) A study where you would like to determine the chance getting three girls in a
family of three children
d) A study of the effects of a fertilizer on a soybean crop
e) A study of the effect of koalas on Florida ecosystem
8. Identify the sampling technique used (random, cluster, stratified, convenience,
systematic):
a) Every fifth person boarding a plane is searched thoroughly.
b) At a local community College, five math classes are randomly selected out of 20
and all of the students from each class are interviewed.
c) A researcher randomly selects and interviews fifty male and fifty female teachers.
d) A researcher for an airline interviews all of the passengers on five randomly
selected flights.
e) Based on 12,500 responses from 42,000 surveys sent to its alumni, a major
university estimated that the annual salary of its alumni was 92,500.
SOLUTIONS:
1. a) population: all American households
sample: collection of 1353 American households surveyed
b) population: all elementary school children
sample: collection of 2625 elementary school children surveyed
c) population: all people entering the mall within the assigned 3 hour period
sample: every 6th person entering the mall within the 3 hour period
2. a) statistic part of 300,000 graduates are surveyed
b) parameter all assembly-line employees were included in the study
c) statistic 360 credit cards were examined (not all)
3. a) population: all readers of USA Today; sample: volunteers that responded to the
survey; population parameter: percent who have at least one caffeinated drink among
all readers of USA Today; sample statistic: percent who have at least one caffeinated
drink among those who responded to the survey
b) population: all starts in the galaxy; sample: the few stars selected for measurements;
population parameter: mean (average) of distances between all stars and Earth;
sample statistics: mean of distances between the stars in the sample and Earth
4. a) descriptive
6. a) nominal
8. systematic
b) inferential
b) nominal
cluster
c) inferential
c) ratio
stratified
d) inferential
d) interval
cluster
5. a) qualitative
e) ratio
random
b) qualitative
f) ratio
convenience
c) quantitative
g) nominal
stratified
d) qualitative
h) nominal
cluster
e) quantitative
I) ordinal
convenience
j) ordinal
random
k) ratio
l) nominal
m) nominal
n) ratio
o) ratio
7. a) survey
b) observation
c) simulation
d) experiment
e) simulation
9. It is limited to people with computers.
10. Yes it tends to encourage negative responses.
68
78
97
83
49
67
89
74
100
56
78
71
81
74
97
81
94
39
68
92
25
87
77
72
82
Number
296
83
121
Example 3:
What will most likely cause you to be late to your early morning class?
Cause
Frequency
snoozing after alarm
20
goes off
car trouble
3
too long over breakfast 15
last minute studying
18
finding the right clothes 12
other
4
Example 4: The following table gives mean daily caloric intake (all residents) and infant
mortality rate (per 1,000 births) for nine countries:
Country
Afganistan
Austria
Colombia
Ehtiopia
Germany
Liberia
New Zealand
Turkey
U.S.
Example 5: You have been in the walking/jogging exercise program for 20 weeks, and
for each week you have recorded the distance (in miles) you covered in 30 minutes.
Week
1
Distance 1.5
10
1.4
1.7
1.6
1.9
2.0
1.8
2.0
1.9
2.0
Week
11 12
Distance 2.1 2.1
13
14
2.3
2.3
15
2.2
16
17
18
19
20
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.4
2.7
Frequency
3
6
7
4
3
2.4
Measures of Variation
Example 1:
Sample annual salaries (in thousand dollars) for public elementary school teachers are
listed:
26.0
19.9 17.8 31.4 38.6
28.7
25.0
Example 2:
The heights (in inches) of ALL 10 adult males in an office are:
70 72 71 70 69 73 69 68 70 71
Example 3:
Midterm scores for 20 random students (in a class of 100):
82 45 37 98 100 74 87 89 63 76
75 61 43 99 86 86 75 92 65 80
What is the meaning of s (sample standard deviation)?
Example 4:
The mean value of land and buildings per acre from a sample of farms is $2,400, with a
standard deviation of $450. Which of the following prices ($/acre) would be considered
unusual?
3,325 2,450 3,200 1,490 1,675 2,950
Example 5:
A random sample of the age of employees in a City Hall:
Age
20-29
30-39
40-49
50-59
60-69
frequency
5
10
12
8
5
Example 6:
How long will it take you to graduate from college? (These are responses from a sample
of students on campus.)
Years
3
4
5
6
7
8
f
10
48
25
10
6
1
Example 10:
The batting averages of Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds for 13 recent years:
Sosa:
x = 0.279, s = 0.033
_
9
5 8
3 3 7 7
2 5
1
ii) 0
1
2
3
4
iii) 10
11
12
13
14
5 8 9
3 3 7 3
2 5 6
9
5 8
3 3 7 7
2 5
1
Example 12:
_
Data entries: a b c d
Mean of a, b, c, d is x , and the standard deviation is s.
What will happen to the mean and standard deviation if we add 5 to each data entry?
What will happen to the mean and standard deviation if each data entry is 3 times larger.
4
5
3
2
0
9
9
9
6
6
3
8 3
7 7 6
5
3
10. How long does it take you to get ready for work/school:
Response
frequency
0-20 min
20-40 min
40-60 min
more than 1hr
25
75
37
15
What is the probability that the next person that answers to the survey says that it takes
him/her a) 40-60 min. to get ready? b) 20-40 min. or 40-60 min. to get ready?
11. 2 dice are tossed. Find the probability that their sum is not seven.
12. Assume that the probability of having a boy or a girl is 0.5. In a family of 5 children,
what is the probability that:
a) all children are boys,
b) all the children are the same gender,
c) there is at least 1 girl.
13. A probability experiment consists of tossing a coin and rolling a six-sided die.
a) Draw a tree diagram.
Find the following probabilities:
b) tossing a tail and rolling an even number,
c) tossing a head or tail and rolling a number greater than 3,
d) tossing a head or rolling a number greater than 3.
Find the complement of this event (in c).
14. The probability that a manufactured part for the computer is working is 0.992. What
is the probability that the part is not working?
15. The heights (in inches) of all males enrolled in history class:
6
7
5566689999
00122234455667
If a male student is selected at random, find the probability that his height is:
a) at least 69 in.
b) between 70 in. and 73 in. (inclusive)
c) more than 75 in.
d) not 69 in.
No coffee
Coffee
No disease
14,068
4,806
8. Find the probability of drawing 3 diamonds in a row from a regular deck of cards if:
a) the drawn card is returned to the deck each time,
b) the drawn card is not returned to the deck each time.
9. Refer to problem #8. Find the probabilities if you are drawing 3 fives in a row.
10. Of campus professors 60% are male, and of these, 15% work for College of
Humanities. Find the following probabilities:
a) randomly selected professor is a male and works for College of Humanities.
b) randomly selected professor is a male and does not work for College of
Humanities.
c) randomly selected professor is a female and works for College of Humanities.
11. Student ages
17 26
27 36
37 46
47 56
57 and over
Frequency
149
85
46
15
5
a) Find the probability that a student chosen at random is between 27 and 36 years
old.
b) If 4 students are randomly selected (without replacement), find the probability that
all four students are between 37 and 46 years old.
c) If four students are randomly selected (without replacement), what is the
probability that at least 1 will be 57 years or older?
d) If four students are randomly selected (without replacement), what is the
probability that none of these four students are between 17 and 26 years old?
12. The probability that a person in the U.S. has type A+ blood is 32.5%. Five unrelated
people in the U.S. are selected at random. Find the probability that:
a) all five have type A+.
b) none of the five has type A+.
c) at least one of the five has type A+.
13. Refer to the problem #15 from 3.1 and assume that there are no replacements.
a) Find the probability that 2 randomly chosen male students are both between 69 in. and
73 in. tall.
b) Find the probability that at least 1 of 2 students is between 69 in. and 73 in. tall.
14. The access code for a garage door consists of 5 digits. The first digit cannot be 0.
Find the probability that you guess the code from the first try?
15. The following graph shows the types if incidents encountered with drivers using cell
phones.
Driving and Cell Phone Use
60
52
50
Number of incidents
45
40
30
23
20
20
10
10
Swerved
sped up
had an accident
Incident
a) Find the probability that a randomly chosen incident involves cutting off a car.
b) Find the probability that two randomly chosen incidents (without replacement) both
had an accident.
c) Find the probability that a randomly chosen incident did not involve cutting off a car.
d) Find the probability that from randomly selected 3 incidents (without replacement) at
least one involved speeding up.
16. If you roll a 6 sided die 8 times, find the probability that you roll an odd number at
least once.
Psychology major
150
375
Non-Psychology major
9,750
11,300
20
20
Frequency
18
15
15
12
10
0
snoozing after alarm last minute studying
clothes trouble
other
car trouble
Reason
10 C 3
25 P3 =
40 C 3
40 C 3 =
40 P3
35 P7
15!
=
12!
18!
=
13!
6. The scholarship committee is considering 25 applicants for 3 awards (1st award $3,500, 2nd award - $3,000, 3rd award - $2,000).
7. There are 30 passengers that still need to check-in and get a boarding pass. The airline
representative will upgrade 5 passengers to the first class, seats 1B, 1D, 3A, 3C, 4B.
In how many different ways can the airline representative do this?
8. 20 runners enter the competition. In how many ways can they finish 1st, 2nd, and 3rd?
9. How many ways can 3 Republicans, 2 Democrats, and 1 Independent be chosen from
10 Republicans, 8 Democrats, and 5 Independents to fill 6 positions on City Council?
10. A security code consists of 2 letters followed by 3 digits. The first letter can not be A,
B, or C, and the last digit can not be a 0. What is the probability of guessing the security
code in one trial? 2 trials?
11. A shipment of 40 fancy calculators contains 5 defective units. In how many ways can
a college bookstore buy 20 of these units and receive:
a) no defective units
b) one defective unit
c) at least 17 good units
d) What is the probability of the bookstore receiving 2 defective units?
e) Find the probability of receiving at most 2 bad calculators.
f) Find the probability of receiving at least 4 defective units.
12.You are dealt a hand of four cards from a standard deck. Find the probability that:
a) the first three cards are of the same suit and one is of a different suit.
b) three cards are of the same suit and one is of a different suit.
Frequency
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
22
27
35
36
40
56
70
31
13
20
households
P(x)
100
325
450
94
31
4. 1,500 students were asked: How many parking tickets did you receive within the last
5 years?
number of
parking tickets
x
0
1
2
3
4
5
P(x)
0.150
0.280
0.267
0.167
0.100
0.036
Find the expected value / mean and standard deviation for the number of parking tickets.
5. The total number of defects per batch of DVDs inspected is given:
Defects
Batches
95
113 87
64
13
Construct a probability distribution and find the mean and standard deviation for the
number of defects per batch.
b) 2.31.
2. Find the area under the standard normal curve to the right of:
a) z =1.36
b) z = -2.67
c) z = 3.15
5. The monthly phone bills in a city are normally distributed with a mean of 30$ and a
standard deviation of 12$. Find the x-values that correspond to z-scores of
and c) 0.23.
a) 2.35, b) 3.17
Explain the meaning of your answers.
6. Annual U.S. per capita orange use: = 11.4 lb , = 3lb .
a) What annual per capita use of oranges represents the 10th percentile?
b) What annual per capita use of oranges represents the third quartile (75th percentile)?
selected, about
1.
Age
and
Hours
Slept:
The
age
(in
years)
and
the
number
of
hours
slept
in
a
day
by
10
infants
are
given:
Age
0.1
0.2
0.4
0.7
0.6
0.9
0.1
0.2
0.4
0.9
Hours
14.9
14.5
13.9
14.1
13.9
13.7
14.3
13.9
14.0
14.1
a)
Find
the
equation
of
the
regression
line.
b)
Construct
a
scatter
plot
of
the
data
and
draw
the
regression
line.
2.
Age
and
Systolic
blood
pressure:
Age,
x
Systolic
blood
pressure,
y
16
109
25
122
39
143
45
132
49
199
Do
you
notice
any
unusual
data
values?
a)
Find
the
equation
of
the
regression
line.
b)
Construct
a
scatter
plot
of
the
data
and
draw
the
regression
line.
c)
Use
the
regression
equation
to
predict
the
systolic
blood
pressure
for
someone
who
is
i)
30,
ii)
70,
iii)
47,
iv)
5
years
old.
d)
Use
the
regression
equation
to
predict
the
age
of
someone
who
has
a
systolic
blood
pressure
of
i)
120,
ii)
160.
MATH 1040
REVIEW (EXAM I)
Chapter 1
1. For the studies described, identify the population, sample, population parameters, and
sample statistics:
e) The Gallup Organization conducted a poll of 1003 Americans in its household
panel to determine what percentage of people plan to cancel their summer vacation
because of the increase in gasoline prices.
f) Harris Interactive surveyed 2435 U.S. adults nationwide and asked them to rate
quality of American public schools.
g) The American Institute of Education conducts an annual study of attitudes of
incoming college students by surveying approximately 261,000 first-year students
at 462 colleges and universities. There are approximately 1.6 million first-year
college students in this country.
2. Determine whether the numerical value is a parameter or a statistics (and explain):
d) A survey of 1103 students were taken from the university with 19,500 students.
e) The 2006 team payroll of the New York Mets was $101,084,963.
f) In a recent study of physics majors at the university, 15 students were double
majoring in math.
3. Identify whether the statement describes inferential statistics or descriptive statistics:
a) Based on previous clients, a marriage counselor concludes that the majority of
marriages that begin with cohabitation before marriage will result in divorce.
b) 78% of electricity used in France is derived from nuclear power.
4. Determine whether the data are qualitative or quantitative:
a) the social security numbers of the employees in the law firm
b) the zip codes of a sample of 270 customers at a local grocery store
c) the number of complaint letter received by the USPS in a given month
5. Identify the data sets level of measurement (nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio):
p) numbers of touchdowns scored by a major university in five randomly selected
games : 1 2 5 1 2
q) the average daily temperatures (in degrees Fahrenheit) on seven randomly
selected days
r) manuscripts rated as acceptable or unacceptable
s) the lengths (in minutes) of the top ten movies with respect to ticket sales in 2007
t) the size-class for a sample of automobiles:
subcompact compact midsize large
compact
large
u) the four departments of a car dealership:
sales
financing
parts and service
customer service
g) the years of birth for students in this class
6. Decide which method of data collection you would use to collect data for the study
(observational study, experiment, simulation, or survey):
f) A study where a drug is given to 57 patients and placebo to another group of 57
patients to determine if the drug has an effect on a patients illness.
g) The ages of people living within 300 miles of your home
h) The effect of stopping the cooling process of a nuclear reactor
7. Identify the sampling technique used (random, cluster, stratified, convenience,
systematic):
k) 32 sophomores, 35 juniors and 49 seniors are randomly selected from 230
sophomores, 280 juniors, 577 seniors at a certain high school.
l) To ensure customer satisfaction, every 35th phone call received by customer
service will be monitored.
m) A journalist goes to a campground to ask people how they fell about air pollution.
n) Calling randomly generated telephone numbers, a study asked 855 U.S. adults
which medical conditions could be prevented by their diet.
o) A pregnancy study in Chicago, randomly selected 25 communities from the
metropolitan area, then interviewed all pregnant women in these communities.
8. Would sampling technique used in 7c) lead to a biased study? Explain why.
9. A report by the California Citrus Commission stated that cholesterol levels can be
lowered by drinking at least one glass of a citrus product each day.
Determine whether the survey questions is biased and why.
SOLUTIONS:
1. a) population: all Americans; sample: 1003 Americans surveyed;
population parameter: percentage of all Americans who plan to cancel their vacation;
sample statistic: percentage of those in the sample who plan to cancel their vacation
b) population: all Adult Americans; 2435 selected adults
population parameter: opinions of all American adults on public schools;
sample statistics: opinions of those in the sample on public schools
c) population: 1.6 million first-year college students; sample: 261,000 selected firstyear college students; population parameters: attitudes of all first-year college students;
sample statistics: attitudes of those in the sample (261,000 selected)
2. a) statistics only 1103 students were surveyed (not all students)
b) parameter the entire team payroll is included
c) parameter all physics majors were included in the study
3. a) inferential
b) descriptive
4. a) qualitative
b) qualitative
c) quantitative
5. a) ratio b) interval c) ordinal d) ratio e) ordinal f) nominal g) interval
6. a) experiment b) survey c) simulation
7. a) stratified b) systematic c) convenience d) random e) cluster
8. Yes most likely people who go camping do not approve of air pollution.
9. Yes a report sponsored by the citrus industry is much more likely to reach
conclusions favorable to the industry.
Chapter 2
1. The Highway Patrol, using radar, checked the speeds (in mph) of 30 passing motorists
at a checkpoint. The results are listed below:
44 38 41 50 36 36 43 42 49 48
35 40 37 41 43 50 45 39 45 38
50 41 47 36 35 40 42 43 48 33
Construct frequency distribution, a relative frequency distribution, and a cumulative
frequency distribution using six classes. Find the midpoint of each class.
Construct a frequency histogram, a relative frequency histogram and a frequency polygon
using six classes.
Construct an ogive using six classes.
If the policeman writes a ticket to anyone driving over 41 miles per hr, what percent of
the cars will get a ticket?
2. Use the given frequency distribution to a) construct a cumulative frequency
distribution and an ogive, b) approximate the mean of the grouped data.
Phone calls (per day)
Class
8-11
12-15
16-19
20-23
24-27
Frequency, f
18
23
38
47
32
3. Listed below are the ACT scores of 40 randomly selected students at a major
university:
18 22 13 15 24 24 20 19 19 12
16 25 14 19 21 23 25 18 18 13
26 26 25 25 19 17 18 15 13 21
19 19 14 24 20 21 23 22 19 17
Construct a frequency distribution table of the data, using eight classes.
If the university wants to accept the top 90% of the applicants, what should the minimum
score be?
If the university sets the minimum score at 18, what percent of the applicants will be
accepted?
4. The data below represent the infant mortality rates (per 1,000 births) and the life
expectancies for seven selected countries in Africa. Use a scatter plot to display the data.
Infant Mortality
Life Expectancy
63
45
199
31
71
51
61
47
67
39
35
70
194
37
Is there a relationship between the infant mortality and the life expectancy?
5. A study was conducted to determine how people get jobs. Four hundred subjects were
randomly selected and the following are the results:
Job Sources of
Survey Respondents
Frequency
69
124
72
32
103
Use the ogive to approximate the number of students who said that their leisure time is at
least 19.5 hrs.
7. For example 1 construct a stem-and-leaf plot and a dot plot. What can you conclude
about the data? Find the mean, the median, and the mode.
8. Data set: systolic blood pressure of 17 randomly selected patients at a blood bank
135 120 115 132 136 124 119 145 98
113 125 118 130 116 121 125 140
Construct a frequency distribution and frequency histogram of the data using five classes.
Approximate the mean using five classes.
Find the mean, the median and mode. Are there any outliers?
9. Grade points are assigned as follows: A=4, B=3. C=2. D=1, AND F=0. Grades are
weighted according to credit hours. If a student receives an A in four-unit class, a D in a
two unit-class, a B in 3-unit class and a C in a three-unit class, what is the students grade
point average?
10. A student receives test scores of 78 and 82. The students final exam score is 88 and
quiz grades are 72,81, 95, 84. Each test is worth 20% of the final grade, quizzes (total)
count 25% of the final grade, and the final exam is 35% of the final grade.
What is the students mean score in class?
11. Use the data to approximate the mean heart rate of adults in the gym.
12. For the stem-and leaf plot below, find the range of the data set:
1 1 5
2 6 6 6 7 8 9
2 7 7 7 8 8 9 9 9
3 0 1 1 2 3 4 4 5
3 6 6 6 7 8 8 9
4 0 2
13. Find the sample standard deviation:
a)15 42 53 7 9 12 14 28 47
b) 70 72 71 70 69 73 69 68 70 71
14. In a random sample, 10 students were asked to compute the distance they travel one
way to school to the nearest tenth of a mile. The data is listed below. Compute the range,
variance and standard deviation of the data
1.1 5.2 3.6 5.0 4.8 1.8 2.2 5.2 1.5 0.8
15. You are the maintenance engineer for a local high school. You must purchase
fluorescent light bulbs for the classrooms. Should you choose Type A with = 3000
hours and = 200 hours, or Type B with = 3000 hours and = 250 hours?
16. Adult IQ scores have a bell-shaped distribution with mean of 100 and a standard
deviation of 15. Use the Empirical Rule to find the percentage of adults with scores
between 70 and 130.
If 250 adults are randomly selected, about how many of them have an IQ between 85 and
130?
(answer: abut 204 adults)
17. The average IQ of students in a particular class is 110, with a standard deviation of 5.
The distribution is roughly bell-shaped. Find the percentage of students with an IQ above
120.
18. Heights of adult women have a mean of 63.6 in. and a standard deviation of 2.5 in.
Does Chebychevs Theorem say anything about the percentage of women with heights
between 58.6 in and 68.6 in? What about the heights between 61.1 in and 66.1 in?
What about the heights between 56.1 in and 71.1 in?
If 300 women are randomly selected, using Chebychevs Theorem determine about how
many are between 56.1 and 71.1 inches tall?
(answer: at least 267 women)
19. Use the data given in #2. Approximate the sample standard deviation of phone calls
per day.
68
78
97
83
49
67
89
74
100
56
78
71
81
74
97
81
94
39
68
92
25
87
77
72
82
Find the first, second, and third quartiles of the midterms scores.
Find the interquartile range. What can you conclude from this?
Draw a box-and-whisker plot that represents this data.
2.
154
150
175
200
225
265
250
275
SOLUTIONS:
1. min=21
max=100
Q1=67
Q2=81
Q3=89
IQR=22
Outliers: 21, 25
About 25% data between 81 and 89.
2. min=154, max=265
Q1=180, Q2=197.5, Q3=211
About 50% of the data are between 180 and 211.
3. 1.4, NO
4. a) 3690 gr (z score is 2.07)
b) z= -1, z=2
16th and 97.5th percentile (z=-1, z=2)
5. 62nd percentile
6. score 81 48th percentile
74th percentile score 89
Chapter 3 - Probability
1. Assume that the probability of having a boy is 0.5, and the probability of having a girl
is 0.5. In a family with 4 children, find the probability that:
a) all the children are girls
b) all the children are the same sex
c) there is at least 1 boy
2. In a survey of college students, 125 said that they are considering taking the next
semester off, and 1,030 students said that they staying in school next semester.
a) If one college student is selected at random, find the probability that the student is
considering taking the next semester off?
b) If 2 students are selected (without replacement), what is the probability that both
are considering taking the next semester off?
c) If 5 students are selected (without replacement), what is the probability that at
least 1 will be considering taking the semester off?
3. The distribution of blood types for 200 Americans is:
Blood type O+
O-
A+
A-
B+
B-
Number
14
65
13
19
76
AB+ AB7
a) If one donor is selected at random, find the probability that he/she has the blood
type A+ or A-.
b) If 2 donors are selected (w/o replacement) find the probability that both donors
are type AB-.
c) If 3 donors are selected (with replacement) find the probability that at least 1
donor is type O-.
4. The Heights (in inches) of all males enrolled in a section of sociology class:
6
7
5 5 6 6 6 8 9 9 9 9
0 0 1 2 2 2 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7
If a male student is selected at random, find the probability that his height is:
a) at least 68 in
b) between 69 in and 73 in (inclusive)
c) not 65 in
5. If you roll a 6 sided die 8 times, find the probability that you will roll an odd number at
least once.
SOLUTIONS:
1. a) 0.0625
b) 0.125
c) 0.9375
2. a) 0.1082
b) 0.01163
c) 0.4366
3. a) 0.39
b) 0.0000503
c) 0.1966
4. a) 0.7917
b) 0.4583
c) 0.9167
5. 0.9961
6. a) 0.00292
b) 0.3499
365 364 363
274
7. 1
8. 0.0909
9. 0.7289
10. a) 0.0156
b) 0.0129
11. a) 0.00046
b) 0.000181
12. a) 0.09
b) 0.51
c) insufficient info.
13. 0.655
14. a) 0.3077
b) 0.5385
c) 0.1538
15. a) (0.329)15 b) 0.99999 (almost 1)
16. 0.0000168
17. a) 0.805
b) 0.81
c) 0.0353
d) 0.6555
e) 0.6992
d)
3C 2 +
15 C 3
12 C1
15 C 4
C
25. a) 15 5 = 0.0306
28 C5
c)
12 C 2
3C 3
210
=
= 0.1538
1,365
C
b) 13 5 = 0.0131
28 C5
13 C 2 + 15 C 4 13 C1 + 15 C 5 13 C 0
28 C5
= 0.5722
P(x)
0.02
0.07
0.13
0.35
0.30
0. 13
13. IQ test scores are normally distributed with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of
Find the probability thata randomly selected person hasan IQ score:
a) less than 90
b) between 97 and 118
c) greater than 125.
14. According to the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics, the distribution of
cholesterol levels in teenage boys is approximately normally distributed with a mean of
170, and a standard deviation of 30. Levels above 200 need attention. Find the probability
that a teenage boy has a cholesterol level:
a) greater than 200
b) less than 120.
Section 5.3
16. Find the z-score for which 92% of the distributions area lies between z and z.
17. Find the z-score for which 70% of the distributions area lies to its right?
18. For the standard normal curve, find the z-score that corresponds to the a) 7th
percentile, b) 98th percentile.
19. Assume that the salaries of elementary school teachers in the U.S. are normally
distributed with a mean of $36,000 and a standard deviation of $3,800. What is the cutoff
salary for teachers in the top 10%.
20. A tire company finds the lifespan for one brand of its tires is normally distributed
with a mean if 47,500 miles and a standard deviation of 3,000 miles. If the manufacturer
is willing to replace no more than 10% of the tires, what should be the approximate
number of miles for the warranty?
21. The body temperatures of adults are normally distributed with a mean of 98.6 o F and
a standard deviation of 0.44 o F. Find the temperature that would correspond to z=1.75.
What percentage of adults will have the temperature higher than the value that
corresponds to z=1.75?
22. In a survey of
men in the U.S. (ages 20-29), the mean height was 69.9 inches with a
standard deviation of 3.0 inches.
a) What height represents the 87th percentile?
b) If 350 men are randomly selected, about how many would have a height greater
than 76 in?
SOLUTIONS:
1. 0 P(x) 1 and P(x) = 1
= 3.23 3.2
= 1.18 1.2
3. a) continuous
b) continuous
c) discrete
d) discrete
e) continuous
4. a) binomial
b) not binomial (more than 2 outcomes)
c) not binomial (more than 2 outcomes)
d) binomial
5. trial: drawing a card with replacement
success: card drawn is a heart
not success: card drawn is not a heart
n=6, p=0.25, q=0.75, x=0,1,2,3,4,5,6
x
P(x)
0.1780 0.3560
0.2966
0.1318
0.0330
0. 0044 0.0002
P(3) = 0.1318
6. 0.0002 (or 0.02%)
7. P(6)= 50 C6 (0.11) 6 (0.89) 44 = 0.167
8. trial: drawing a card with replacement
success: card drawn is a heart
not success: card drawn is not a heart
n=6, p=0.25, q=0.75, x=0,1,2,3,4,5,6
x
P(x)
0.1780 0.3560
0.2966
0.1318
0.0330
0. 0044 0.0002
9. 0.6865
10. 0.2324 = 3.3, = 1.71
11. .a) 0.173 , b) 0.00134
12. a) 0.8997, b) 0.7704, c) 0.9236 , d) 0.1077
13. a) 0.2514, b) 0.4642, c) 0.0475
14. a) 0.1587 b) 0.0475
(-1.75,1.75)
15. a) 8.08% b) about 6 c) about 37
16.
17. 0.52
18. a) 1. 48 b) 2.05
19. $40,864
20. 43,660
21. 99.37 degrees, 4.01%
22. a) 73.29 in b) about 7