The Mean Corporation manufactures a line of unassembled furniture. Based on historical evidence, the customer service manager knows that the proportion of customers that have not had any problems with assembling the furniture at home is 0.65.
Improvements have been made to the instructions provided with the furniture, and the customer service manager believes that this will increase the proportion of customers that can assemble the furniture without problems (p) to above 0.65. A hypothesis test is conducted in order to find out.
The null and alternative hypotheses are:
H0: p = 0.65
Ha: p > 0.65
To run the test, the manager randomly selects a sample of 116 people and asks them to assemble a piece of furniture produced by the Mean Corporation. The proportion of people in this sample that succeed is 0.68.
a)Calculate the test statistic (z). Give your answer to 2 decimal places.
z =
b)Calculate the P-value. Give your answer as a decimal to 4 decimal places.
P-value =
The Mean Corporation manufactures a line of unassembled furniture. Based on historical evidence, the customer service...
The Mean Corporation manufactures a line of unassembled furniture. Based on historical evidence, the customer service manager knows that the proportion of customers that have not had any problems with assembling the furniture at home is 0.60. Improvements have been made to the instructions provided with the furniture, and the customer service manager believes that this will increase the proportion of customers that can assemble the furniture without problems (p) to above 0.60. A hypothesis test is conducted in order...
The Mean Corporation manufactures a line of unassembled furniture. Based on historical evidence, the customer service manager knows that the proportion of customers that have not had any problems with assembling the furniture at home is 0.58. Improvements have been made to the instructions provided with the furniture, and the customer service manager believes that this will increase the proportion of customers that can assemble the furniture without problems (p) to above 0.58. A hypothesis test is conducted in order...
Suppose Jonathan works for the local transportation authority and knows that for the last few years, only 62% of buses have arrived at their destination on time. However, the city recently completed improvements to the main roads, and Jonathan thinks that a higher proportion of buses now arrive on time because of these improvements. Jonathan collects a random sample of bus arrival times for 500 buses and finds that 347 buses arrived on time. He conducts a one-sample, right-sided z-test...
Suppose Jonathan works for the local transportation authority and knows that for the last few years, only 62% of buses have arrived at their destination on time. However, the city recently completed improvements to the main roads, and Jonathan thinks that a higher proportion of buses now arrive on time because of these improvements. Jonathan collects a random sample of bus arrival times for 500 buses and finds that 347 buses arrived on time. He conducts a one-sample, right-sided z-test...
Geoff has been running a restaurant in the city for many years. He knows from experience that the proportion of customers that leave tips at this restaurant is 0.55. Geoff has recently opened a restaurant in a suburban area. It seems that tipping habits are different in the suburbs: Geoff believes that the proportion of customers that tip at his new restaurant (p) may be different to 0.55. He conducts a hypothesis test to find out. The null and alternative...
Geoff has been running a restaurant in the city for many years. He knows from experience that the proportion of customers that leave tips at this restaurant is 0.67. Geoff has recently opened a restaurant in a suburban area. It seems that tipping habits are different in the suburbs: Geoff believes that the proportion of customers that tip at his new restaurant (p) may be different to 0.67. He conducts a hypothesis test to find out. The null and alternative...
Geoff has been running a restaurant in the city for many years. He knows from experience that the proportion of customers that leave tips at this restaurant is 0.58. Geoff has recently opened a restaurant in a suburban area. It seems that tipping habits are different in the suburbs: Geoff believes that the proportion of customers that tip at his new restaurant (p) may be different to 0.58. He conducts a hypothesis test to find out. The null and alternative...
1) You want to obtain a sample to estimate a population mean. Based on previous evidence, you believe the population standard deviation is approximately σ=20.5σ=20.5. You would like to be 90% confident that your esimate is within 10 of the true population mean. How large of a sample size is required? n = Use a critical value accurate to three decimal places, and do not round mid-calculation — this is important for the system to be able to give hints...
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ABC Corporation is considering installing a new assembly procedure. Seven employees of the corporation are randomly selected and the times taken by them to assemble one unit of the product using the existing procedure are recorded. They’re also asked to assemble one unit of the product using the new procedure. The assembly times (in minutes) for these seven selected employees for each procedure are listed in the following table. The production manager of the corporation would like to test whether...