Find the critical values, t0, to test the claim that μ1 = μ2. Two samples are random, independent, and come from populations that are normal. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that σ 2 1 ≠ σ 2 2 . Use α = 0.05. n1 = 32 n2 = 30 x1 = 16 x2 = 14 s1 = 1.5 s2 = 1.9
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Find the critical values, t0, to test the claim that μ1 = μ2. Two samples are...
Find the critical value to test the claim that μ1 < μ2. Two samples are random, independent, and come from populations that are normal. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that σ 2/1= σ2/2. Use α = 0.05. n1 = 15 n2 = 15 x1 = 25.74 x2 = 28.29 s1 = 2.9 s2 = 2.8
Find the standardized test statistic to test the claim that μ1 < μ2. Two samples are random, independent, and come from populations that are normally distributed. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that σ 2 /1 = σ 2 /2 . n1 = 15 n2 = 13 x1 = 27.88 x2 = 30.43 s1 = 2.9 s2 = 2.8
Find the standardized test statistic to test the claim that μ1 ≠ μ2. Two samples are random, independent, and come from populations that are normally distributed. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that σ 2 /1 ≠ σ 2 /2 . n1 = 11 n2 = 18 x1 = 6.9 x2 = 7.3 s1 = 0.76 s2 = 0.51
Find the standardized test statistic, t, to test the claim that μ1 < μ2. Two samples are random, independent, and come from populations that are normally distributed. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that two populations' variance is the same (σ21= σ22). n1 = 15 n2 = 15 x1 = 25.76 x2 = 28.31 s1 = 2.9 s2 = 2.8
Find the critical value, t 0 t0, to test the claim that mu 1 μ1 not equals ≠ mu 2 μ2. Two samples are randomly selected and come from populations that are normal. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that sigma Subscript 1 Superscript 2 σ21 not equals ≠ sigma Subscript 2 Superscript 2 σ22. Use alpha equals 0.02 . Use α=0.02. n 1 n1 equals =11, n 2 n2 equals =18, x overbar 1 x1 equals = 8.6...
Find the degrees of freedom, df to test the hypothesis that μ1 > μ2. Two samples are randomly selected and come from populations that are normal. The sample statistics are given below. n1 = 40 n2 = 40 x1= 63.0 x2= 61.5 s1 = 15.8 s2 = 29.7 Round your answer DOWN to the nearest integer.
Suppose you want to test the claim that μ1 = μ2. Two samples are randomly selected from normal populations. The sample statistics are given below. Assume that σ 2 over 1 ≠ σ 2 over 2 . At a level of significance α=0.01, when should you reject H0? n1 = 25 n2 = 30 1 = 21 2 = 19 s1 = 1.5 s2 = 1.9 A. Reject H0 if the standardized test statistic is less than -2.492 or greater...
Two samples are random and independent. Find the P-value used to test the claim that μ1 = μ2. Use α = 0.05. Population statistics: σ1 = 2.5 and σ2 = 2.8 Sample statistics: x1 = 12, n1 = 40 and x2 = 13, n2 = 35 A. 0.0526 B. 0.1052 C. 0.1138 D. 0.4020
Suppose you want to test the claim that μ1 ≠ μ2. Assume the two samples are random and independent. At a level of significance of α = 0.05, when should you reject H0? Population statistics: σ1 = 1.5 and σ2 = 1.9 Sample statistics: x1 = 30, n1 = 50 and x2 = 28, n2 = 60 A. Reject H0 if the standardized test statistic is less than -1.645 or greater than 1.645. B. Reject H0 if the standardized test...
22) Suppose you want to test the claim that μ1 > μ2. Two samples are randomly selected from each population. The sample statistics are given below. At a level of significance of α = 0.10, find the test statistic and determine whether or not to reject H0. (8.1) n1 = 35 n2 = 42 x1 = 33 x2 = 31 s1 = 2.9 s2 = 2.8 A) z = 3.06; Reject H0 and support the claim that μ1 > μ2...