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(xi- x)

Month Units Sold (xi-x)^2


1 94 1 1
2 100 7 49
3 85 -8 64
4 94 1 1
5 92 -1 1
Total 465 0 116
Mean 93 5.3851648071
Cost of drugs (xi-x) (xi-x)^2
4376 -174 30276
5578 1028 1056784
2717 -1833 3359889
4920 370 136900
4495 -55 3025
4798 248 61504
6446 1896 3594816
4119 -431 185761
4237 -313 97969
3814 -736 541696
Total 45500 9068620
Mean 4550 Standard Deviation 1003.8049833
A. Sampled population for study= 426
B. Social Security 0.8215962441
C. Education 0.74
D. Job Growth 0.8309859155
Critical Reading 502
Mathematics 515
Writing 494
Standard Deviation 100
Sampling SD(90) 10.540926
Sampling SD(100) 10

A.
p(x+10) 0.8286091
p(x-10) 0.1713909
p(492<x<512) 0.6572183

B.
p(x+10) 0.8286091
p(x-10) 0.1713909
p(505<x<525) 0.6572183

C.
p(x+10) 0.8413447
p(x-10) 0.1586553
p(484<x<504) 0.6826895
A. B. C.
Male 21.68 p(x+0.5) 0.957705
Female 18.8 p(x-0.5) 0.042295
S.D (Male) 2.3 p(18.3<x<19.3) 0.91541
S.D (Female) 2.05
Sampling sd(m) 0.325269 D.
Sampling sd(f) 0.289914 Sampling SD(f)(120) 0.187139
p(x+0.5) 0.937876 p(x+0.3) 0.945543
p(x-0.5) 0.062124
p(21.18<x<22.18) 0.875753
We have higher probabilities of females as the size of sampled mean is low the probability increases
Mean 183 181175
Standard Deviation 50
Sampling SD(30) 9.1287092918
Sampling SD(50) 7.0710678119
Sampling SD(100) 5

A.
p(x+8) 0.8095817598
p(x-8) 0.1904182402
p(175<x<191) 0.6191635197

B.
p(x+8) 0.8710504824
p(x-8) 0.1289495176
p(175<x<191) 0.7421009647

C.
p(x+8) 0.9452007083
p(x-8) 0.0547992917
p(175<x<191) 0.8904014166

D.
Age No, the
Startup
probabilities are not differentE.because the sample size and standard erro
29 or less 55% F.
30 or more 45% Sampling SD(400) 0.024874686
p(x+0.05) 0.977788408
A. p(x-0.05) 0.022211592
Sampling Distribution of 29 years or less 0.55 p(0.5<x<0.6) 0.955576815
Sampling SD 0.0351781182

B.
p(x+0.05) 0.9223907552 s
p(x-0.05) 0.0776092448
p(0.5<x<0.6) 0.8447815103

C.
Sampling Distribution of 30 years or more 0.45
Sampling SD 0.0351781182

D.
p(x+0.05) 0.9223907552
p(x-0.05) 0.0776092448
p(0.5<x<0.6) 0.8447815103
e sample size and standard error are same in both the cases
People end up tossing 0.12
Sample 540

A.
Sampling distribution 0.12
Sampling SD 0.013984118

B.
p(p+0.03) 0.9840351992
p(p-0.03) 0.0159648008
p(0.09<p<0.15) 0.9680703984

C.
p(p+0.015) 0.8582848796
p(p-0.015) 0.3603406232
p(0.115<p<0.135) 0.4979442564
Population Proportion 0.76
Sample Population 400

A.
Sample Population Mean 0.76
Sample SD(400) 0.0213541565

Sample SD(750) 0.015594871

B.
p(p+0.03) 0.9199713269
p(p-0.03) 0.0800286731
p(0.73<p<0.79) 0.8399426538

C.
p(p+0.03) 0.9728044911
p(p-0.03) 0.0271955089
p(0.73<p<0.79) 0.9456089821
Mean Hours 15
SD 4
Sampling SD 0.5163977795

A.
p(x+1) 0.9735962443
p(x-1) 0.0264037557
p(14<x<16) 0.9471924886

B.
p(x+0.75) 0.9268004504
p(x-0.75) 0.0731995496
p(14.25<x<15.75) 0.8536009007
Victim of fraud 40%
Sample population 380

A.
Sample population proportion 0.4
Sampling SD 0.0251312345
p(p+0.04) 0.9442677369
p(p-0.04) 0.0557322631
p(0.36<p<0.44) 0.8885354738

B.
p(p<0.45) 0.97668007
p(p>0.45) 0.02331993

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