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Ch. 6 - Confidence Intervals
Larson - Elementary Statistics: Picturing the World 8th Edition
Larson8th EditionElementary Statistics: Picturing the WorldISBN: 9780137493470Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 6, Problem 6.2.28c

Constructing a Confidence Interval In Exercises 25–28, use the data set to (c) construct a 99% confidence interval for the population mean. Assume the population is normally distributed.
Homework The weekly time spent (in hours) on homework for 18 randomly selected high school students
Table displaying homework hours for 18 high school students, with values ranging from 8.8 to 15.5 hours.

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Step 1: Calculate the sample mean (x̄) by summing all the data points provided in the table and dividing by the total number of data points (n = 18). Use the formula: = x n
Step 2: Calculate the sample standard deviation (s) using the formula: s = ( x - ) 2 n - 1
Step 3: Determine the critical value (t*) for a 99% confidence interval using a t-distribution table. The degrees of freedom (df) are calculated as: df = n - 1 . For df = 17, find the t* value corresponding to a 99% confidence level.
Step 4: Calculate the margin of error (E) using the formula: E = t* × s n
Step 5: Construct the confidence interval for the population mean using the formula: [ - E , + E ] . This interval represents the range within which the true population mean is likely to fall with 99% confidence.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Confidence Interval

A confidence interval is a range of values, derived from sample statistics, that is likely to contain the population parameter with a specified level of confidence. For example, a 99% confidence interval suggests that if we were to take many samples and construct intervals in the same way, approximately 99% of those intervals would contain the true population mean.
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Normal Distribution

Normal distribution is a probability distribution that is symmetric about the mean, showing that data near the mean are more frequent in occurrence than data far from the mean. In constructing confidence intervals, it is often assumed that the population from which the sample is drawn is normally distributed, especially when sample sizes are small.
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Sample Mean and Standard Deviation

The sample mean is the average of a set of values, calculated by summing all observations and dividing by the number of observations. The sample standard deviation measures the amount of variation or dispersion in a set of values. Both the sample mean and standard deviation are crucial for calculating confidence intervals, as they provide the necessary statistics to estimate the range within which the population mean is likely to fall.
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Related Practice
Textbook Question

Constructing a Confidence Interval In Exercises 25–28, use the data set to (c) construct a 99% confidence interval for the population mean. Assume the population is normally distributed.

SAT Scores The SAT scores of 12 randomly selected high school seniors

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Textbook Question

When all other quantities remain the same, how does the indicated change affect the width of a confidence interval? Explain.

b. Increase in the sample size

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Textbook Question

Constructing a Confidence Interval In Exercises 31 and 32, use the data set to (b) find the sample standard deviation

[APPLET] Earnings The annual earnings (in dollars) of 32 randomly selected intermediate level life insurance underwriters (Adapted from Salary.com)

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Textbook Question

When all other quantities remain the same, how does the indicated change affect the width of a confidence interval? Explain.

c. Increase in the population standard deviation

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Textbook Question

Fast Food You wish to estimate, with 90% confidence, the population proportion of U.S. families who eat fast food at least once per week. Your estimate must be accurate within 3% of the population proportion.

b. Find the minimum sample size needed, using a prior study that found that 83% of U.S. families eat fast food at least once per week. (Source: The Barbecue Lab)

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Textbook Question

Finite Population Correction Factor In Exercises 57 and 58, use the information below.

In this section, you studied the construction of a confidence interval to estimate a population mean. In each case, the underlying assumption was that the sample size n was small in comparison to the population size N. When n ≥ 0.05N however, the formula that determines the standard error of the mean needs to be adjusted, as shown below.

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Recall from the Section 5.4 exercises that the expression sqrt[(N-n)/(n-1)] is called a finite population correction factor. The margin of error is

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Use the finite population correction factor to construct each confidence interval for the population mean.

c. c = 0.95, xbar = 40.3, σ = 0.5, N = 300, n = 68.

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