Identify the null hypothesis and alternative hypothesis


Assignment:

1. The duration of telephone calls directed by a local telephone company: σ=4.2 minutes, n=500, 97% confidence. Use the confidence level and sample data to find the margin of error E.

2. It is claimed that a dish washer consumes 46 kWh/year. Twelve homes were randomly sampled which yields a mean of 42 kWh/year and sample standard deviation of 11.9 kWh., assume the population to be normally distributed, does this suggest that, on average, dish washers consume less than 46 kWh/year?

Assume we want to use a 0.05 significance level to test the claim.

a. Identify the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis.

b. Determine the test statistic.

c. Is there sufficient evidence to support the claim?

3. It is commonly accepted that the mean temperature of human is 98.6oF. Yours truly has nothing better to do but measured the temperatures of 26 colleagues 1 to 4 times daily to get a total of 123 measurements. The collected data yielded a sample mean of 98.4oF and a sample standard deviation of 0.7oF. Is the mean temperature of his colleagues less than 98.6oF at the 0.01 significance level? Justify your answer with the proper statistics.

a. Identify the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis.

b. Determine the test statistic.

c. Find the p value.

d. Is there sufficient evidence to support the claim?

4. Below are the statistics for electricity usages of two neighborhoods. Perform a hypothesis test to settle the dispute that neighborhood 1 uses less energy than neighborhood 2.

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a. Identify the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis.

b. Determine the test statistic.

c.Find the p value.

d. Is there sufficient evidence to support the claim?

5. The recommended daily allowance (RDA) of cobalamine (Vitamin B12) for growing teens is 2.4 µg (micrograms). It is generally believed that growing teens are getting less than the RDA of 2.4 µg of cobalamine daily.

A not-to-be-named Pharmaceutical (ntbnP) peddles dietary supplements around the country. It is claimed by ntbnP representatives that by taking their vitamin supplement, teens will have the RDA of cobalamine. FDA is going to take on ntbnP to show that the supplement comes short of providing teens with the recommended RDA.

FDA managed to collect with a 24-hour period blood sample of 10 randomly selected teens around the country. The amounts of cobalamine (in µg) determined in these 10 randomly selected teens are given as follow:

1.85 2.35 1.87 1.90 1.37 2.35 2.55 2.28 1.95 2.49

Based on their national experience, FDA assumes that the the population standard deviation of cobalamine in teens to be 0.56 µg.

Now, you are asked to weigh in on the dispute between FDA and ntbnP.

a. Given the above information, what kind of hypothesis test will you conduct? z-test, t-test, χ2-test, F-test, or Ω-test? Please explain.

b. What will be the null hypothesis, the alternative hypothesis, and, hence, the "tailedness" of the test (left-tailed, right-tailed, or two-tailed)?

c. What is be the corresponding test statistics?

d. What is the corresponding p-value of the hypothesis test?

e. What kind of conclusion can you draw from the hypothesis test you have just performed? Of course, representatives of ntbnP would like to have the conclusion skewed to their advantage. And so would the officials from FDA. What would you do if you are representing ntbnP? But, if you are representing FDA, how would you present your argument?

f. But, wait. What if FDA actually does not know the population standard deviation in this case, would you conduct your hypothesis test different? Just in case that you are going to perform the hypothesis different, what would you do instead?

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Basic Statistics: Identify the null hypothesis and alternative hypothesis
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