Services
Discover
Homeschooling
Ask a Question
Log in
Sign up
Filters
Done
Question type:
Essay
Multiple Choice
Short Answer
True False
Matching
Topic
Statistics
Study Set
Business Statistics Study Set 1
Quiz 10: Estimation and Hypothesis Testing for Two Population Parameters
Path 4
Access For Free
Share
All types
Filters
Study Flashcards
Practice Exam
Learn
Question 1
True/False
The Cranston Hardware Company is interested in estimating the difference in the mean purchase for men customers versus women customers. It wishes to estimate this difference using a 95 percent confidence level. Assume that the variances are equal and the populations normally distributed. The following data represent independent samples from each population:
Based on these data, the company can conclude that there is a statistical difference between men and women with regard to mean spending at the hardware store with men tending to spend more on average than women.
Question 2
True/False
Box and whisker plots are often useful for determining whether two populations have distributions that might be skewed.
Question 3
True/False
In estimating the difference between two population means, if a 95 percent confidence interval includes zero, then we can conclude that there is a 95 percent chance that the difference between the two population means is zero.
Question 4
True/False
Increasing the size of the samples in a study to estimate the difference between two population means will increase the level of confidence that a decision maker can have regarding the interval estimate.
Question 5
True/False
Marketing managers for a toy store located in two separate cities is interested in estimating the difference in the mean daily sales for the two cities. They want to calculate a 90 percent confidence interval and will select a sample of 10 days in each store for the study. If the marketing managers assume that the population standard deviations are known, the critical value for the confidence interval is z = 1.645.
Question 6
True/False
In order to make the test for the difference between two population means valid, the sample size in each independent sample must be the same.
Question 7
True/False
The NCAA is interested in estimating the difference in mean number of daily training hours for men and women athletes on college campuses. It wants 95 percent confidence and will select a sample of 10 men and 10 women for the study. The variances are assumed equal and the populations normally distributed. The sample results are:
Based on these data, the lower limit for the difference between population means is 0.15 hours.
Question 8
True/False
The NCAA is interested in estimating the difference in mean number of daily training hours for men and women athletes on college campuses. It wants 95 percent confidence and will select a sample of 10 men and 10 women for the study. The variances are assumed equal and the populations normally distributed. The sample results are:
Based on these sample data, the critical value for developing the confidence interval is z = 1.96.
Question 9
True/False
All other things held constant, decreasing the level of confidence for a confidence interval estimate for the difference between two population means will result in a smaller margin of error.
Question 10
True/False
The Cranston Hardware Company is interested in estimating the difference in the mean purchase for men customers versus women customers. It wishes to estimate this difference using a 95 percent confidence level. If the sample size is n = 10 from each population, the samples are independent, and sample standard deviations are used, and the variances are assumed equal, then the critical value will be t = 2.1009.
Question 11
True/False
The NCAA is interested in estimating the difference in mean number of daily training hours for men and women athletes on college campuses. They want 95 percent confidence and will select a sample of 10 men and 10 women for the study. The sample results are:
Based on these data, the point estimate is .30 hours.
Question 12
True/False
The t-distribution is still applicable even when there are small violations of the assumptions for the case when the variances for two populations are unknown. This is particularly true when the sample sizes are approximately equal.
Question 13
True/False
Recently the managers for a large retail department store stated that a study has revealed that female shoppers spend on average 23.5 minutes longer in the store per visit than do male shoppers. Based on this information, the managers can be confident that female shoppers, as a population, do spend longer times in the store than do males shoppers, as a population.
Question 14
True/False
In estimating the difference between two population means based on small, independent samples from the two populations, two important assumptions are that the populations each be normally distributed and the populations have equal variances.
Question 15
True/False
In estimating a confidence interval for the difference between two means, when the samples are independent and the standard deviations are unknown, it can be acceptable for there to be small violations of the assumptions of normality and equal variances, especially when the sample sizes are equal.
Question 16
True/False
The NCAA is interested in estimating the difference in mean number of daily training hours for men and women athletes on college campuses. It wants 95 percent confidence and will select a sample of 10 men and 10 women for the study. The variances are assumed equal and the populations normally distributed. The sample results are:
Based on these sample data, the estimate for the standard deviation of the sampling distribution is found by taking the square root of the sum of the two sample variances.
Question 17
True/False
When performing a hypothesis test for the difference between the means of two independent populations, where the standard deviations are known, the variances must be assumed equal.