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HEGR 280: Engineering Statistics (2016 Spring) 2016Spring-X-EGR280-20936

Midterm 2

Review Test Submission: Midterm 2 Part 1

Review Test Submission: Midterm 2 Part 1


User

Mahmoud Mirza

Course

EGR 280: Engineering Statistics (2016 Spring)

Test

Midterm 2 Part 1

Started

3/15/16 8:43 PM

Submitted

3/16/16 1:29 PM

Due Date

3/16/16 11:59 PM

Status

Completed

Attempt
Score

35.01 out of 42.01 points

Time
Elapsed

16 hours, 45 minutes

Instructions This exam is open book, open notes. You may use any class materials, your

previously submitted homework assignments, or material that you find on the


web. This exam is to be purely an individual effort; you cannot collaborate with
anyone else in working this exam. Collaboration would include working with
other students in the class, posting a question to an online forum or discussion
group for help, or seeking help from any individual other than the course
instructor in any way.
This exam must be completed no later than Wednesday March 16 at 11:59 PM
MST.

Question 1

0.01 out of 0.01 points

Your test will not be graded unless you agree to the following statement:
I certify that this submission consists entirely of my work. I have neither requested nor
accepted help from anyone in doing this work. I have not given help to anyone else for
this test. I understand that collaborating with anyone else in any form on this test is
considered academic dishonesty and will be sanctioned as described in the ASU Student
Academic Integrity Policy.

Question 2

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Known (Large Sample) (Part 1 of 4)


We wish to construct a two-sided 95.0% confidence interval. Compute z/2

Question 3

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Known (Large Sample) (Part 2 of 4)


We wish to construct a two-sided 95.2% confidence interval around the mean for the
data values in the file T1_CIK_P382.csv. The number of values is n = 40, and the
population standard deviation is = 2.17. Compute the lower limit of the confidence
interval.

Question 4

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Known (Large Sample) (Part 3 of 4)


We wish to construct a two-sided 82.5% confidence interval around the mean for the
data values in the file T1_CIK_P465.csv. The number of values is n = 25, and the
population standard deviation is = 2.54 Compute the upper limit of the confidence
interval.

Question 5

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Known (Large Sample) (Part 4 of 4)


Suppose we wish to have a two-sided 84.3% confidence interval with width of 1.00.
Compute the number of samples required. The population standard deviation is =
2.80.

Question 6

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Unknown (Small Sample) (Part 1 of


3)
Compute tn-1,/2 for a two-sided 85.9% confidence interval around the mean. The
sample contains 16 values.

Question 7

0 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Unknown (Small Sample) (Part 2 of


3)
Compute the lower limit of the two-sided 91.0% confidence interval around the mean
for the data values in the file T1_CIU_P576.csv. The number of values is n = 19.

Question 8

0 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals around the Mean-Variance Unknown (Small Sample) (Part 3 of


3)
Compute the upper limit of the two-sided 93.4% confidence interval around the mean
for the data values in the file T1_CIU_P937.csv. The number of values is n = 18.

Question 9

1 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals Using Paired Data (Part 1 of 3)


This problem requires you to compute a confidence interval on the difference of paired
data values; the data values for this test are in the file T1_CIP_P663.csv. There are 19
data pairs. Your confidence interval should have a 98.0% level. For this problem,
subtract the First Value from the Second Value.
Compute tn-1,/2

Question 10

0 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals Using Paired Data (Part 2 of 3)


This problem requires you to compute a confidence interval on the difference of paired
data values; the data values for this test are in the file T1_CIP_P860.csv. There are 14
data pairs. Your confidence interval should have a 96.8% level. For this problem,
subtract the First Value from the Second Value. Compute the lower limit for the
confidence interval.

Question 11

0 out of 1 points

Confidence Intervals Using Paired Data (Part 3 of 3)


This problem requires you to compute a confidence interval on the difference of paired
data values; the data values for this test are in the file T1_CIP_P671.csv. There are 15
data pairs. Your confidence interval should have a 92.4% level. For this problem,
subtract the First Value from the Second Value. Compute the upper limit for the
confidence interval.

Question 12
Hypothesis Testing Vocabulary (Part 1 of 5)
Match each term with its definition.

1 out of 1 points

Question

Alternate Hypothesis
Statistical Hypothesis
Null Hypothesis

Question 13

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Vocabulary (Part 2 of 5)


True or False: The null hypothesis and alternate hypothesis can be the same.

Question 14

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Vocabulary (Part 3 of 5)


True or False: The null hypothesis is a hypothesis that will be retained or rejected on the
basis of a sample.

Question 15

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Vocabulary (Part 4 of 5)


Which of the following is true about the P-value?

Question 16

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Vocabulary (Part 5 of 5)


What does it mean that a result is significant at the 5% level?

Question 17
Hypothesis Testing Fundamentals (Part 1 of 5)
Put the following elements of a hypothesis test into the proper order:

1 out of 1 points

Question 18

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Fundamentals (Part 2 of 5)


Match each of the following questions with the type of hypothesis test that would be
most appropriate.
Question

Is the weight of airplanes taking off from an airport higher than the designed load of
the runway?
Is an automated cornflake box filling machine under filling or over filling boxes?
Are student test scores at a high school lower than the national average?

Question 19

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Fundamentals (Part 3 of 5)


Suppose you are determining whether the depth of groves cut into aluminum by a
milling machine is equal to 1.7 mm. You cut 14 groves, then measure the depth of each
one. With these measurements, you perform a statistical hypothesis test to determine
whether the groove depth is equal to 1.7 mm. Which of the following tests would you
use?

Question 20

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Fundamentals (Part 4 of 5)


Suppose you are measuring the temperature at which rocket propellant burns to
determine whether it is higher than the maximum temperature at which the rocket
nozzle will not be damaged. Which of the following tests would you use?

Question 21

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing Fundamentals (Part 5 of 5)


Suppose you are testing ground water samples for the presence of salt. A level of salt of
more than 50 mg/L is an indication that remedial action is required. You decide to
perform a statistical hypothesis test to determine from the salt concentrations in 16
ground water samples whether the salt concentration is above 50 mg/L. Which of the
following tests would you use?

Question 22

1 out of 1 points

Finding P-Values-variance known (Part 1 of 3)


Suppose we desire to perform the following one-sided upper hypothesis test on the
mean of a population (variance known):

H0: = -4.133
H1: > -4.133
The test is conducted using n = 36 samples. Suppose you know that the population
variance if H0 is true is 2 = 36.994. Compute the P-value for X = -5.225

Question 23

1 out of 1 points

Finding P-Values-variance known (Part 2 of 3)


Suppose we desire to perform the following one-sided lower hypothesis test on the
mean of a population (variance known):

H0: = -6.529
H1: < -6.529
The test is conducted using n = 21 samples. Suppose you know that the population
variance if H0 is true is 2 = 26.473. Compute the P-value for X = -7.569

Question 24

1 out of 1 points

Finding P-Values-variance known (Part 3 of 3)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population (variance known):

H0: = 8.617
H1: 8.617
The test is conducted using n = 28 samples. Suppose you know that the population
variance if H0 is true is 2 = 47.485. Compute the P-value for X = 7.778

Question 25

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Known (Part 1 of 4)


Suppose we desire to perform the following one-sided lower hypothesis test on the
mean of a population (variance known):

H0: = 0.832
H1: < 0.832

The data for the test is in the file T1_HTK_P569.csv. Suppose you know that the
population variance if H0 is true is 2 = 26.392. Compute the P-value for this test.

Question 26

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Known (Part 2 of 4)


Suppose we desire to perform the following one-sided lower hypothesis test on the
mean of a population (variance known):

H0: = -1.556
H1: < -1.556
The data for the test is in the file T1_HTK_P3.csv. Suppose you know that the population
variance if H0 is true is 2 = 31.011. For this test and data, would you reject the null
hypothesis at a 5% confidence level?

Question 27

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Known (Part 3 of 4)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population (variance known):

H0: = 11.700
H1: 11.700
The data for the test is in the file T1_HTK_P201.csv. Suppose you know that the
population variance if H0 is true is 2 = 48.636. Compute the P-value for this test.

Question 28

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Known (Part 4 of 4)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population (variance known):

H0: = 2.610
H1: 2.610
The data for the test is in the file T1_HTK_P443.csv. Suppose you know that the
population variance if H0 is true is 2 = 37.965. For this test and data, would you reject
the null hypothesis at a 5% confidence level?

Question 29

1 out of 1 points

Finding P-values-Variance Unknown (Part 1 of 2)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population; the population variance is unknown:

H0: = -9.873
H1: -9.873
Compute the P-value for this test if x = -7.764, s2 = 36.514, and n = 22 samples.

Question 30

1 out of 1 points

Finding P-values-Variance Unknown (Part 2 of 2)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population; the population variance is unknown:

H0: = 4.972
H1: 4.972
Compute the P-value for this test if x = 7.698, s2 = 46.977, and n = 22 samples.

Question 31

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Unknown (Part 1 of 2)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population; the population variance is unknown:

H0: = 8.835
H1: 8.835
The data for the test is in the file T1_HTU_P458.csv. Compute the P-value for this test.

Question 32

1 out of 1 points

Hypothesis Testing on the Mean-Variance Unknown (Part 2 of 2)


Suppose we desire to perform the following two-sided hypothesis test on the mean of a
population; the population variance is unknown:

H0: = 11.513
H1: 11.513
The data for the test is in the file T1_HTU_P307.csv. For this test and data, would you
reject the null hypothesis at a 5% confidence level?

Question 33

0 out of 1 points

Paired t-test Hypothesis Test (Part 1 of 3)


This problem requires you to set up a paired t-test for the following hypothesis test:

H0: D = 0
H1: D 0
The paired data values for this test are in the file T1_PTH_P765.csv. There are 18 data
pairs. In the test, subtract the First Value from the Second Value. Also, 0 = 0
Compute the test statistic t0

Question 34

1 out of 1 points

Paired t-test Hypothesis Test (Part 2 of 3)


This problem requires you to set up a paired t-test for the following hypothesis test:

H0: D = 0
H1: D 0
The paired data values for this test are in the file T1_PTH_P869.csv. There are 15 data
pairs. In the test, subtract the First Value from the Second Value. Also, 0 = 0
Compute the P-value for this test.

Question 35

1 out of 1 points

Paired t-test Hypothesis Test (Part 3 of 3)


This problem requires you to set up a paired t-test for the following hypothesis test:

H0: D = 0
H1: D 0
The paired data values for this test are in the file T1_PTH_P765.csv. There are 18 data
pairs. In the test, subtract the First Value from the Second Value. Also, 0 = 0
For this test and data, would you reject the null hypothesis at a 5% confidence level?

Question 36

0 out of 1 points

Error (Part 1 of 3)
Suppose you wish to know whether alcohol gel fuel burns at a temperature hotter than
1900 degrees C. You formulate the following hypothesis test:

H0: = 1900 degrees C

H1: > 1900 degrees C


Match the following statements with the type of error they describe.
Question

After collecting a sample, you conclude the gel fuel burns at a temperature above
1900 degrees C, when in fact it burns at a temperature of 1900 degrees C.
After collecting a sample, you conclude the gel fuel burns at a temperature of 1900
degrees C, when in fact it burns at a temperature above 1900 degrees C.

Question 37

1 out of 1 points

Error (Part 2 of 3)
Suppose you are testing whether the ventilation system in a room with several plasma
cutters is adequate. In particular, you collect and analyze air samples, finding the
concentration of ozone in each sample, and you want to determine whether the ozone
concentration in the room is greater than 1 ppm.You formulate the following hypothesis
test:

H0: = 1 ppm
H1: > 1 ppm
Which of the following sentences describes a Type II error?

Question 38

1 out of 1 points

Error (Part 3 of 3)
Suppose you are testing rope samples to determine whether the maximum force the
rope can sustain before breaking is greater than 1000 lbs. You formulate the following
hypothesis test:

H0: = 1000 lbs


H1: > 1000 lbs
Which of the following sentences describes a Type I error?

Question 39

0 out of 1 points

Correlation (Part 1 of 1)
What is r, the sample correlation coefficient for thedata in T1_COR_P447.csv?

Question 40

1 out of 1 points

Linear Regression (Part 1 of 2)


Compute a linear regression on the data in the file T1_LRG_P998.csv. What is the slope
coefficient 1?

Question 41

1 out of 1 points

Linear Regression (Part 2 of 2)


Compute a linear regression on the data in the file T1_LRG_P647.csv. What is the
intercept coefficient 0?

Question 42

1 out of 1 points

Linear Regression Interpretation (Part 1 of 2)


The data in the file T1_LRI_P308.csvhave been fitted by the following linear regression
line:
yhat = 13.209 + -0.071 x
Find r2, the coefficient of determination for this linear regression.

Question 43

1 out of 1 points

Linear Regression Interpretation (Part 2 of 2)


The data in the file T1_LRI_P571.csvhave been fitted by the following linear regression
line:
yhat = -3.265 + 0.127 x
Which of the following plots best represents the residuals for this linear regression?
Wednesday, March 16, 2016 2:02:09 PM MST

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