Review 12A AP Statistics Name:: A A A A

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The passage discusses a study on the effects of having children early in marriage on divorce rates and examples of hypothesis tests and confidence intervals. Short readable summaries are published in print with longer versions available online.

A hypothesis test is carried out to help answer this question. The data give good evidence that more than two-thirds of authors support continuing this system since the p-value is less than 0.05.

Between 0.645 and 0.795 of all authors would say 'Yes' if asked whether the journal should continue using this system.

Review 12A

AP Statistics

Name:

Directions: Work on these sheets. Answer completely, but be concise. Tables are attached. Part 1: Multiple Choice. Circle the letter corresponding to the best answer. 1. A sociologist is studying the effect of having children within the first two years of marriage on the divorce rate. Using hospital birth records, she selects a random sample of 200 couples who had a child within the first two years of marriage. Following up on these couples, she finds that 80 couples are divorced within five years. To determine if having children within the first two years of marriage increases the divorce rate we should test (a) hypotheses H0: p = 0.50, Ha: p 0.50 (b) hypotheses H0: p = 0.50, Ha: p > 0.50 (c) hypotheses H0: p = 0.50, Ha: p < 0.50 (d) hypotheses H0: p = 0.40, Ha: p > 0.40 (e) none of the above 2. In order to study the amounts owed to a particular city, a city clerk takes a random sample of 16 files from a cabinet containing a large number of delinquent accounts and finds the average amount x owed to the city to be $230 with a sample standard deviation of $36. It has been claimed that the true mean amount owed on accounts of this type is greater than $250. If it is appropriate to assume that the amount owed is a Normally distributed random variable, the value of the test statistic appropriate for testing the claim is (a) 3.33 (b) 1.96 (c) 2.22 (d) 0.55 (e) 2.1314 3. An inspector inspects large truckloads of potatoes to determine the proportion p in the shipment with major defects prior to using the potatoes to make potato chips. Unless there is clear evidence that this proportion is less than 0.10, she will reject the shipment. To reach a decision she will test the hypotheses H0: p = 0.10, Ha: p < 0.10 using the large-sample test for a population proportion. To do so, she selects an SRS of 50 potatoes from the more than 2000 potatoes on the truck. Suppose that only two of the potatoes sampled are found to have major defects. Which of the following conditions for inference about a proportion using a hypothesis test are violated? (a) The data are an SRS from the population of interest (b) The population is at least 10 times as large as the sample (c) n is so large that both np0 and n(1 p0) are 10 or more, where p0 is the proportion with major defects if the null hypothesis is true (d) There appear to be no violations (e) More than one condition is violated 4. What is the value of t * , the critical value of the t distribution with 8 degrees of freedom, which satisfies the condition that the probability is 0.10 of being larger than t * ? (a) 1.415 (b) 1.397 (c) 1.645 (d) 2.896 (e) 0.90

Chapter 12

Test 12B

5. The water diet requires one to drink two cups of water every half hour from when one gets up until one goes to bed, but otherwise allows one to eat whatever one likes. Four adult volunteers agree to test the diet. They are weighed prior to beginning the diet and after six weeks on the diet. The weights (in pounds) are
Person Weight before the diet Weight after six weeks 1 180 170 2 125 130 3 240 215 4__ 150 152

For the population of all adults, assume that the weight loss after six weeks on the diet (weight before beginning the diet weight after six weeks on the diet) is Normally distributed with mean . To determine if the diet leads to weight loss, we test the hypotheses H0: = 0, Ha: > 0 Based on these data we conclude that (a) we would not reject H0 at significance level 0.10 (b) we would reject H0 at significance level 0.10 but not at 0.05 (c) we would reject H0 at significance level 0.05 but not at 0.01 (d) we would reject H0 at significance level 0.01 (e) the sample size is too small to allow use of the t procedures 6. Because t procedures are robust, the most important condition for their use is (a) the population standard deviation is known (b) the population distribution is exactly Normal (c) the data can be regarded as an SRS from the population (d) np and n(1 p) are both at least 10 (e) there are no outliers in the sample data 7. Which of the following 95% confidence intervals would lead us to reject H 0 : p 0.30 in favor of H a : p 0.30 at the 5% significance level? (a) (0.30, 0.38) (b) (0.19, 0.27) (c) (0.27, 0.31) (d) (0.24, 0.30) (e) None of these 8. A medical researcher wishes to investigate the effectiveness of exercise versus diet in losing weight. Two groups of 25 overweight adult subjects are used, with a subject in each group matched to a similar subject in the other group on the basis of a number of physiological variables. One of the groups is placed on a regular program of vigorous exercise but with no restriction on diet, and the other is placed on a strict diet but with no requirement to exercise. The weight losses after 20 weeks are determined for each subject, and the difference between matched pairs of subjects (weight loss of subject in exercise group weight loss of matched subject in diet group) is computed. The mean of these differences in weight loss is found to be 2 lb with standard deviation s = 4 lb. Is this evidence of a difference in mean weight loss for the two methods? To answer this question, you should use (a) one-proportion z test (b) one-sample t test (c) one-sample z test (d) one-proportion z interval (e) one-sample t interval
Chapter 12 2 Test 12B

Part 2: Free Response Communicate your thinking clearly and completely. 9. Publishing scientific papers online is fast, and the papers can be long. Publishing in a paper journal means that the paper will live forever in libraries. The British Medical Journal combines the two: it prints short and readable versions, with longer versions available online. Is this OK with authors? The journal asked a random sample of 104 of its recent authors several questions. One question was Should the journal continue using this system? In the sample, 72 said Yes. (a) Do the data give good evidence that more than two-thirds (67%) of authors support continuing this system? Carry out an appropriate test to help answer this question.

(b) What proportion of all authors would say Yes if asked? (Estimate with 95% confidence.)

Chapter 12

Test 12B

10. In a study of the effectiveness of weight-loss programs, 47 subjects who were at least 20% overweight took part in a group support program for 10 weeks. Private weighings determined each subjects weight at the beginning of the program and 6 months after the programs end. The paired t test was used to assess the significance of the average weight loss. The paper reporting the study said, The subjects lost a significant amount of weight over time, t(46) = 4.68, P < 0.01. (a) What hypotheses were tested in this study? Be sure to define any parameters you use.

(b) Discuss whether each of the required conditions for using the paired t test is satisfied in this study.

(c) The paper follows the tradition of reporting significance only at fixed levels such as = 0.01. In fact the results are more significant than P < 0.01 suggests. What is the P-value of this t test?

(d) Explain to someone who knows no statistics but is interested in weight-loss programs what the practical conclusion is.

I pledge that I have neither given nor received aid on this test._______________________

Chapter 12

Test 12B

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