Final Examination: Sample
Final Examination: Sample
FINAL EXAMINATION
MULTIPLE CHOICE. (50 questions, 1.2 points each)
1) Your telephone area code is an example of a(n) ________________________________
variable.
A) ordinal B) ratio C) nominal D) interval
2) Thirty work orders are selected from a filing cabinet containing 500 work order folders by
choosing every 15th folder. Which sampling method is this?
A) Systematic sample B) Simple random sample
C) Cluster sample D) Stratified sample
5) To classify prices from 62 recent home sales, Sturges' Rule would recommend:
A) 7 classes. B) 10 classes. C) 9 classes. D) 8 classes.
6) In a sample of 10,000 observations from a normal population, how many would you expect to
lie beyond three standard deviations of the mean?
A) About 127 B) About 100 C) About 27 D) None of them
7) John scored 85 on Prof. Hardtack's exam (Q1 = 40 and Q3 = 60). Based on the fences, which
is correct?
A) John is in the 85th percentile. B) John is not an outlier.
C) John is an extreme outlier. D) John is an outlier.
8) Find the probability that either event A or B occurs if the chance of A occurring is .5, the
chance of B occurring is .3, and events A and B are independent.
A) .85 B) .65 C) .15 D) .80
10) A die is rolled. If it rolls to a 1, 2, or 3, you win $2. If it rolls to a 4, 5, or 6, you lose $1.
Calculate the expected winnings.
A) $3.00 B) $0.50 C) $1.50 D) $1.00
11) A machine dispenses water into a glass. Assuming that the amount of water dispensed
follows a continuous uniform distribution from 10 ounces to 16 ounces, the standard deviation of
the amount of water dispensed is about:
A) 1.73 ounces. B) 3.51 ounces. C) 0.57 ounce. D) 3.00 ounces.
13) The lengths of brook trout caught in a certain Colorado stream are normally distributed with
a mean of 14 inches and a standard deviation of 3 inches. What proportion of brook trout caught
will be between 12 and 18 inches in length?
A) .2486 B) .6826 C) .6563 D) .4082
14) The lengths of brook trout caught in a certain Colorado stream are normally distributed with
a mean of 14 inches and a standard deviation of 3 inches. What lower limit should the State
Game Commission set on length if it is desired that 80 percent of the catch may be kept by
fishers?
A) 9.22 inches B) 11.48 inches C) 12.00 inches D) 12.80 inches
16) The owner of Limp Pines Resort wanted to know the average age of its clients. A random
sample of 25 tourists is taken. It shows a mean age of 46 years with a standard deviation of 5
years. The width of a 98 percent CI for the true mean client age is approximately:
A) 2.797 years. B) 4.984 years. C) 2.326 years. D) 1.711 years.
17) Which statement is most nearly correct, other things being equal?
A) Quadrupling the sample size roughly halves the standard error of the mean.
B) The standard error of the mean depends on the confidence level.
C) The standard error of the mean depends on the population size.
D) Doubling the sample size will cut the standard error of the mean in half.
18) The Central Limit Theorem (CLT) implies that:
A) the distribution of the mean is approximately normal for large n.
B) repeated samples must be taken to obtain normality.
C) the mean follows the same distribution as the population.
D) the population will be approximately normal if n ≥ 30.
20) As the sample size increases, the standard error of the mean:
A) decreases. B) increases.
C) may increase or decrease. D) none of the others
22) The owner of Torpid Oaks B&B wanted to know the average distance its guests had traveled.
A random sample of 16 guests showed a mean distance of 85 miles with a standard deviation of
32 miles. The 90 percent confidence interval (in miles) for the mean is approximately:
A) (71.0, 99.0)B) (71.8, 98.2) C) (68.7, 103.2) D) (74.3, 95.7)
23) What is the approximate width of a 90 percent confidence interval for the true population
proportion if there are 12 successes in a sample of 25?
A) .328 B) .392 C) .960 D) .412
24) A random sample of 160 commercial customers of PayMor Lumber revealed that 32 had
paid their accounts within a month of billing. The 95 percent confidence interval for the true
proportion of customers who pay within a month would be:
A) 0.144 to 0.256 B) 0.153 to 0.247 C) 0.138 to 0.262 D) 0.148 to 0.252
25) A random sample of 160 commercial customers of PayMor Lumber revealed that 32 had
paid their accounts within a month of billing. Can normality be assumed for the sample
proportion?
A) No.
B) Need more information to say.
C) Yes.
27) For a given sample size, when we increase the probability of a Type I error, the probability
of a Type II error:
A) decreases.
B) increases.
C) remains unchanged.
D) is impossible to determine without more information.
30) Hypothesis tests for a mean using the critical value method require:
A) sampling a normal population. B) using a two-tailed test.
C) specifying α in advance. D) knowing the true population mean.
31) Dullco Manufacturing claims that its alkaline batteries last at least 40 hours on average in a
certain type of portable CD player. But tests on a random sample of 18 batteries from a day's
large production run showed a mean battery life of 37.8 hours with a standard deviation of 5.4
hours. To test DullCo's hypothesis, the test statistic is:
A) -2.101 B) -1.960 C) -1.980 D) -1.728
32) For a sample size of n = 100, and σ = 10, we want to test the hypothesis H0: μ = 100. The
sample mean is 103. The test statistic is:
A) 1.645 B) 0.300 C) 3.000 D) 1.960
34) Last year, 10 percent of all teenagers purchased a new iPhone. This year, a sample of 260
randomly chosen teenagers showed that 39 had purchased a new iPhone. The test statistic to find
out whether the percentage has risen would be:
A) 2.258 B) .0256 C) 2.758 D) 2.687
35) Last year, 10 percent of all teenagers purchased a new iPhone. This year, a sample of 260
randomly chosen teenagers showed that 39 had purchased a new iPhone. To test whether the
percentage has risen, the critical value at α = .05 is:
A) 1.960 B) 1.658 C) 1.645 D) 1.697
36) In a left-tailed test comparing two means with variances unknown but assumed to be equal,
the sample sizes were n1 = 8 and n2 = 12. At α = .05, the critical value would be:
A) -1.645 B) -2.101 C) -1.960 D) -1.734
37) In a test for equality of two proportions, the sample proportions were p1 = 12/50 and p2 =
18/50. The test statistic is approximately:
A) -1.31. B) -1.67.
C) Must know α to answer. D) -1.44.
38) If the sample proportions were p1 = 12/50 and p2 = 18/50, the 95 percent confidence interval
for the difference of the population proportions is approximately:
A) [-.011, +.214]. B) [-.120, +.120]. C) [-.298, +.058]. D) [-.144, +.244].
43) Degrees of freedom for the between-group variation in a one-factor ANOVA with n1 = 5, n2
= 6, n3 = 7 would be:
A) 6. B) 2. C) 17. D) 18.
46) If the attendance at a baseball game is to be predicted by the equation Attendance = 16,500 -
75 Temperature, what would be the predicted attendance if Temperature is 90 degrees?
A) 10,020 B) 9,750 C) 12,250 D) 6,750
48) The ordinary least squares (OLS) method of estimation will minimize:
A) only the intercept. B) both the slope and intercept.
C) neither the slope nor the intercept. D) only the slope.
4) Table below give information of the number of hours of sunshine vs how many ice
creams were sold at the shop from Monday to Friday. Using OLS to find the fitted line
𝑦$ = 𝑏# + 𝑏! 𝑥