Ch 10 ICP #3 1) The level of dissolved oxygen (DO) in a stream or river is an important indicator of the water’s ability to support aquatic life. A researcher.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
10- 1 Chapter Ten McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Advertisements

Warm up The mean salt content of a certain type of potato chips is supposed to be 2.0mg. The salt content of these chips varies normally with standard.
+ Paired Data and Using Tests Wisely Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3b Tests About a Population Mean.
Inference for the Mean of a Population
Do political “attack ads” work
Chapter 9 Tests of Significance Target Goal: I can perform a significance test to support the alternative hypothesis. I can interpret P values in context.
Hypothesis Tests Hypothesis Tests One Sample Means.
Ch. 8 Whiteboard Review Hypothesis Testing Problems taken from P. 452.
Chapter 18 MATH 2400.
Business Statistics for Managerial Decision
BCOR 1020 Business Statistics Lecture 20 – April 3, 2008.
Chi-square Goodness of Fit Test
Tests of significance: The basics BPS chapter 15 © 2006 W.H. Freeman and Company.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 9 Inferences Involving One Population.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3a Tests About a Population Mean.
Chapter 9 Hypothesis Testing: Single Population
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
CHAPTER 18: Inference about a Population Mean
Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean. Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean After this section, you should be able to… CHECK conditions for carrying.
AP Statistics Section 9.3A Sample Means. In section 9.2, we found that the sampling distribution of is approximately Normal with _____ and ___________.
Homework Questions?. Section 9.3 Tests about a Population Mean.
More Inferences About Means Student’s t distribution and sample standard deviation, s.
Hypothesis Tests for Notes: Page 194 Hypothesis Tests for One Sample Means Notes: Page 194.
HYPOTHESIS TESTING. Statistical Methods Estimation Hypothesis Testing Inferential Statistics Descriptive Statistics Statistical Methods.
Significance Test A claim is made. Is the claim true? Is the claim false?
Central Limit Theorem-CLT MM4D1. Using simulation, students will develop the idea of the central limit theorem.
MATH 2400 Ch. 15 Notes.
Hypothesis Tests One Sample Means
Hypothesis Testing An understanding of the method of hypothesis testing is essential for understanding how both the natural and social sciences advance.
Chapter 12: Hypothesis Testing. Remember that our ultimate goal is to take information obtained in a sample and use it to come to some conclusion about.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
For her project, Maria bought 50 small bags of jelly beans. The average number of jelly beans in a small bag is 27. It is known that the standard deviation.
What is a Test of Significance?. Statistical hypotheses – statements about population parameters Examples Mean weight of adult males is greater than 160.
Section 6.4 Inferences for Variances. Chi-square probability densities.
Statistical Significance. p ,14,15 p ,22,24,26.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
Power of a test. power The power of a test (against a specific alternative value) Is In practice, we carry out the test in hope of showing that the null.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
HAWKES LEARNING SYSTEMS Students Matter. Success Counts. Copyright © 2013 by Hawkes Learning Systems/Quant Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Section 10.5.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.3 Tests About a Population Mean.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 9.2 Hypothesis Tests for Population Means LEARNING GOAL Understand and interpret one- and two-tailed hypothesis.
Uncertainty and confidence If you picked different samples from a population, you would probably get different sample means ( x ̅ ) and virtually none.
Chapter 9 Testing A Claim 9.1 SIGNIFICANT TESTS: THE BASICS OUTCOME: I WILL STATE THE NULL AND ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESES FOR A SIGNIFICANCE TEST ABOUT A POPULATION.
Chapter 20 MATH 2400.
9.3: Tests about a Population Mean
The Practice of Statistics in the Life Sciences Fourth Edition
CHAPTER 18: Inference about a Population Mean
AP Stats Check In Where we’ve been…
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Tests About a Population Mean
Unit 5: Hypothesis Testing
Unit 5: Hypothesis Testing
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Tests About a Population Mean
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
CHAPTER 18: Inference about a Population Mean
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
CHAPTER 18: Inference about a Population Mean
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Example Malcheon Health Clinic claims that the average waiting time for a patient is 20 minutes with a population standard deviation of 7.26 minutes.
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Presentation transcript:

Ch 10 ICP #3 1) The level of dissolved oxygen (DO) in a stream or river is an important indicator of the water’s ability to support aquatic life. A researcher measures the DO level at 15 randomly chosen locations along a stream. A DO level below 5 mg/l puts aquatic life at risk. Perform a hypothesis test to determine if we have significant evidence to conclude the aquatic life in this stream is at risk? Here are the results in mg per liter Assume sigma = 3.637

Ch 10 ICP #3 2) At the Hawaiian Pineapple Company managers are interested in the size of the pineapples grown in the fields. Last year, the mean weight of the pineapples harvested from one field was 31 oz. A new irrigation system was installed in the field after the growing season. Managers wonder whether this change will affect the mean weight of future pineapples grown in the field. They take an SRS of 50 pineapples and find the mean to be oz. Sigma is known to be 2.4 oz. Perform a significance test to determine if the weight of the pineapples has changed.

Ch 10 ICP #3 3) How well materials conduct heat matters when designing houses for example. Conductivity is measured in terms of watts of heat power transmitted per square meter of surface. In these units, glass has a conductivity about 1. The national institute of Standards and Technology provides exact data on properties of materials. Here are the measurements of heat conductivity of 11 randomly selected pieces of a particular type of glass Is there convincing evidence that the conductivity of this type of glass is greater than 1? Assume sigma = 0.05.

Ch 10 ICP #3 4) The one sample z statistic from a sample of n = observations for the 2 sided test of Has the z-score z = a)Find the p-value for this test b)Is it signifcant at the 1% level? What about the 5% level? c)Redo parts a and b using an alternative hypothesis of

Ch 10 ICP #3 5) Bottle of a popular soda are supposed to contain 300 ml of soda. There is some variation from bottle to bottle because the machinery filling the bottles is not perfect. From experience the distribution of amounts is approximately normal. An inspector measures the contents of 6 randomly selected bottles from a single day’s production. The results are: Do these data provide convincing evidence at the 1% level that the mean amount of cola in all the bottles filled that day differs from the target value of 300 ml?