You are testing H0:μ=100against Ha:μ<100with degrees of freedom of 24. The t statistic is -2.15 . The P-value for the statistic falls between ____ and _____ .
From T table,
with t = -2.15 and df = 24
p-value = 0.021
Which falls between 0.01 and 0.025
You are testing H0:μ=100against Ha:μ<100with degrees of freedom of 24. The t statistic is -2.15 ....
The t statistic for a test of H0:μ=10 HA:μ<10 based on n = 10 observations has the value t = -2.15. (a) What are the degrees of freedom for this statistic? (b) Using the appropriate table in your formula packet, bound the p-value as closely as possible: < p-value <
The one-sample t statistic for testing H0: μ = 20 Ha: μ < 20 based on n = 7 observations has the value t = −1.89. (a) What are the degrees of freedom for this statistic? (b) Between what two values does the P-value of the test fall? (You may use Table D.) A) 0.005 < P < 0.010 B) .01 < P < 0.02 C) 0.02 < P < 0.025 D) 0.025 < P < 0.05 E) 0.05 <...
The one-sample t statistic for testing H0: μ = 40 Ha: μ ≠ 40 from a sample of n = 13 observations has the value t = 2.77. (a) What are the degrees of freedom for t? (b) Locate the two critical values t* from the Table D that bracket t. < t < (c) Between what two values does the P-value of the test fall? 0.005 < P < 0.01 0.01 < P < 0.02 0.02 < P <...
1) The one-sample t-statistic for testing H0: μ = 0 Ha: μ > 0 from a sample of n=20 is t=1.84 a. What are the degrees of freedom for this statistic? b. What are the two critical values of t* that bracket t= 1.84 from the t-table? c. Is the value t=1.84 significant at both the 5% and 1% level?
B. H0:μ=12 vs. HA:μ<12H0:μ=12 vs.
HA:μ<12
C. H0:μ=12 vs. HA:μ>12H0:μ=12 vs.
HA:μ>12
D. H0:μ=12 vs. HA:μ≠12H0:μ=12 vs. HA:μ≠12
2. Which conditions must be met for the hypothesis test to be
valid? Check all that apply.
A. The observations are independent
B. There must be at least 3 levels of the
categorical variable.
C. Population data must be nearly normal or the
sample size must be at least 30.
D. There must be an expected count of at least 5
in...
The one-sample t statistic for testing H0: μ = 8 Ha: μ > 8 from a sample of n=22 observations has the value t = 2.24 a) What are the degrees of freedom for this statistic? Blank 1 b) (report to 3 decimal places) Give the two critical values t* from Table D that bracket t: Lower: Blank 2 Upper: Blank 3 c) (report to 2 decimal places) Between what two values does the P-value of the test fall? Lower:...
We would like to test the hypothesis H0:μ=125H0:μ=125 vs Ha:μ>125Ha:μ>125 We find t = 2.56 with 10 degrees of freedom. What is the appropriate p-value? Select one: a. 0.025 > p-value > 0.01 b. 0.025 > p-value > 0.02 c. 0.05 > p-value > 0.025 d. 0.01 > p-value
The one-sample t statistic for a test of H0: μ = 10 Ha: μ < 10 Based on n = 10 observations has the value t = -2.25. a. What are the degrees of freedom for this statistic? b. What is the P-value for this test? (4 points)
In testing H0:μ=77 versus Ha:μ≠77 for some population, a random sample of 17 observations from a normally distributed population with unknown standard deviation yielded a test statistic of 2.638. The p-value for this test is Select one: a. 0.0041 b. between 0.005 and 0.010 c. between 0.01 and 0.02 d. 0.0082 e. impossible to determine based on the given information.
What is the t-value when testing the following hypotheses and sample data: H0:μ=180 Ha:μ≠180 α = 0.05, x̄ = 183.6, s = 18, n = 130