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Math 138 Final Exam Review Although there are many problems on this review, it does not fully cover all the material in MATH 138. For additional review problems, review your homework problems, projects, previous quizzes and exams, and other classroom handouts. 1. Classify the variable as categorical or quantitative: amount of monthly electric bill in dollars. 2. A real estate company kept a database on the apartments in a certain city. The percentages of various types of apartments are listed below. Type Percent Studio 15.9 1-bedroom 25.5 2-bedroom 45.8 3-bedroom 10.1 What percentage of the apartments in the city are 1-bedroom or 2-bedroom apartments? 3. A survey of patients at a hospital classified the patients by gender and blood type, as seen in the table. Gender Male Female Blood A 105 93 type B 98 84 O 160 145 AB 15 18 a. What percentage of the patients with type-B blood are male? b. What percentage of the female patients have type-O blood? c. What percentage of the patients are male and have type-A blood? d. What percentage of the patients are female or have type-O blood? e. If you know that a patient has type-AB blood, what is the probability the patient is a female? 4. The number of days off that 30 police detectives took in a given year are provided below. Create a histogram of the data. 10 1 3 5 4 7 0 6 6 1 5 1 0 9 11 1 5 7 10 1 5 4 1 7 7 11 1 5 6 0 5. Describe what these boxplots tell you about the relationship between literacy rates on the different continents. Percents of literacy rates by continent 100 90 80 Data 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 Africa percents South American percents Europe percents Asian percents 6. A manufacturer records the number of errors each work station makes during the week. Create a dotplot of the data. 6 3 2 3 5 2 1 0 2 5 4 2 0 7. The stem-and –leaf diagram shows the ages of males playing basketball at a public gym over the course of a day. Describe the shape, center, spread, and unusual features of the distribution. 4 8 9 4 0 1 2 3 3 6 6 8 8 9 3 0 0 0 1 4 4 2 6 7 9 9 9 2 1 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 1 2 3 4 4 4 4 0 0 8. Here are the test scores of 32 students. Construct a boxplot for the given data. 32 37 41 44 46 48 53 55 56 57 59 63 65 66 68 69 70 71 74 74 75 77 78 79 80 82 83 86 89 92 95 99 9. The ages of the 21 members of a track and field team are listed below. Identify potential outliers, if there are any. 15 18 18 19 22 23 24 24 24 25 25 26 26 27 28 28 30 32 33 40 42 10. Suppose a computer chip manufacturer rejects 15% of the chips produced because they fail presale testing. If you test 4 chips, what is the probability that not all of the chips fail? 11. Assume that 11% of people are left-handed. If we select 10 people at random, find the probability that exactly 3 are lefties. 12. Of the coffee makers sold in an appliance store, 6.0% have either a faulty switch or a defective cord, 2.0% have a faulty switch, and 0.8% have both defects. What percent of the coffee makers will have a defective cord? 13. In a certain college, 33% of the physics majors belong to ethnic minorities. If 10 students are selected at random from the physics majors, what is the probability that no more than 6 belong to an ethnic minority? 14. The random variable x is the number of houses sold by a realtor in a single month at the Sendsom’s Real Estate Office. Its probability distribution is as follows. Find the mean and standard deviation for the probability distribution. x, Houses sold P(x), probability 0 0.24 1 0.01 2 0.12 3 0.16 4 0.01 5 0.14 6 0.11 7 0.21 15. Suppose you buy 1 ticket for $1 out of a lottery of 100 tickets where the prize for the one winning ticket is to be $50. What is your expected value? 16. Two different tests are designed to measure employee productivity and dexterity. Several employees are randomly selected and tested with the following results. Productivity Dexterity 23 49 25 53 28 59 21 42 21 47 25 53 26 55 30 63 34 67 36 75 a. How do you know if a linear regression is appropriate? Explain in at least two ways. b. If a linear regression is appropriate, find the equation for the regression line. c. If an employee has productivity rating of 29, what would you expect his/her dexterity to be? d. What is the residual for productivity of 23? e. Interpret the residual in (d). 17. A tax auditor has a pile of 191 tax returns of which he would like to select 17 for a special audit. Describe a method for selecting the sample which involves systematic sampling. 18. At a college there are 120 freshmen, 90 sophomores, 110 juniors, and 80 seniors. A school administrator selects a random sample of 12 of the freshmen, 9 of the sophomores, 11 of the juniors and 8 of the seniors. She then interviews all the students selected. Identify the type of sampling used in this example. 19. On a multiple choice test with 16 questions, each question has four possible answers, one of which is correct. For students who guess at all the answers, what is the mean and standard deviation for the number of correct answers? 20. The March 2000 Consumer Reports compared various brands of supermarket enchiladas in cost and sodium content. Use the scatterplot and part of the regression analysis to answer the questions. Fitted Line Plot Sodium content (mg) = 2185 - 607.0 Cost (per serving) 1750 S 1500 Sodium content (mg) 250.702 R-Sq R-Sq(adj) 77.3% 74.0% 1250 1000 750 500 1.0 1.5 2.0 Cost (per serving) 2.5 3.0 a. Is a linear model appropriate here? Explain. b. What is the correlation between cost and sodium content? c. How much sodium would you expect if the cost is $2.90? 21. Assume that 25% of students at a university wear contact lenses. We randomly select 200 students. What is the mean and standard deviation of the proportion of students in this group who may wear contact lenses? 22. The volumes of soda in quart soda bottles can be described by a Normal model with a mean of 32.3 oz and a standard deviation of 1.2 oz. What percentage of bottles can we expect to have a volume less than 32 oz? 23. The number of hours per week that high school seniors spend on computers is normally distributed, with a mean of 4 hours and a standard deviation of 2 hours. 60 students are chosen at random. Let y be the mean number of hours spent on the computer for this group. Find the probability that y is between 4.2 and 4.4 hours. 24. A researcher wishes to estimate the proportion of fish in a certain lake that is inedible due to pollution of the lake. How large a sample should be tested in order to be 99% confident that the true proportion of inedible fish is estimated to within 6%? 25. A mayoral election race is tightly contested. In a random sample of 2200 likely voters, 1144 said that they were planning to vote for the current mayor. Based on a 95% confidence interval, would you claim that the mayor will win a majority of the votes? Explain. 26. A skeptical paranormal researcher claims that the proportion of Americans that have seen a UFO, p, is less than 4%. Identify the Type II error in this context. 27. 7 of 8,500 people vaccinated against a certain disease later developed the disease. 18 of 10,000 people vaccinated with a placebo later developed the disease. Test the claim that the vaccine is effective in lowering the incidence of the disease. Use a significance level of 0.02. 28. Suppose the proportion of sophomores at a particular college who purchased used textbooks in the past year is p s and the proportion of freshmen at the college who purchased used textbooks in the past year is p f . A study found a 95% confidence interval for ps p f is 0.235,0.427 . Does this interval suggest that sophomores are more likely than freshmen to buy used textbooks? Explain. 29. In the past, the mean running time for a certain type of flashlight battery has been 8.5 hours. That manufacturer has introduced a change in the production method and wants to perform a hypothesis test to determine whether the mean running time has changes as a result. The hypotheses are: H 0 : 8.5 hours H A : 8.5 hours Explain a Type I error. 30. A coach uses a new technique to train gymnasts. 7 gymnasts were randomly selected and their competition scores were recorded before and after the training. The results are shown below. Subject A B C D E F G Before 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.6 9.4 9.6 9.6 After 9.5 9.7 9.6 9.5 9.5 9.9 9.4 Do the data suggest that the training technique is effective in raising the gymnasts’ scores? Perform a hypothesis test at the 5% significance level. 31. Test the claim that for the population of female college students, the mean weight is given by 132 lb. Sample data are summarized as n 20 y 137 lb. s 14.2 lb. Use a significance level of 0.1. 32. A laboratory tested twelve chicken eggs and found that the mean amount of cholesterol was 240 milligrams with s 19.8 milligrams. Construct a 95% confidence interval for the true mean cholesterol content of all such eggs. Interpret. 33. Suppose you have obtained a confidence interval for , but wish to obtain a greater degree of precision. Which of the following would result in a narrower confidence interval? a. Increasing the sample size while keeping the confidence level fixed b. Decreasing the sample size while keeping the confidence level fixed c. Increasing the confidence level while keeping the sample size fixed d. Decreasing the confidence level while keeping the sample size fixed 34. A car insurance company performed a study to determine whether an association exists between age and the frequency of car accidents. They obtained the following sample data. Perform a test to see if there is an association between age and frequency of car accidents. 0.05 Age Group Under 25 25-45 0ver 45 total Number of 0 74 89 82 245 accidents in 1 18 8 12 38 past 3 years More than 1 8 3 6 17 total 100 100 100 300 35. Using the data below and a 0.05 significance level, test the claim that the responses occur with percentages of 15%, 20%, 25%, 25%, and 15% respectively. Response A B C D E Frequency 12 15 16 18 19