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Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Misc. 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 A sample of 1000 women was polled; the women were asked the question “How often during the week do you serve a vegetarian (meatless) main dish to your family at dinnertime?” Partial results follow. What is the probability that a woman never serves her family a vegetarian main dish at dinnertime? A) 0.65 B) 0 C) 0.35 C Suppose we have a “loaded” (unfair) die that gives the outcomes 1 through 6 according to the following probability distribution. If this die is rolled 6000 times, the number of times we get either a 2 or a 3 should be about A) 1000 B) 2000 C) 3000 C Students at X University must be in one of four class ranks: freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior. At this university, 35% of the students are freshmen and 30% are sophomores. If a student is chosen at random, the probability that he or she is either a junior or a senior is A) 35% B) 65% C) 70% A Suppose we toss a fair penny and a fair nickel. Let A be the event that the penny lands heads and B be the event that the nickel lands tails. The events A and B are A) Disjoint B) Independent C) Complements B In the wild, 400 randomly selected blooming azalea plants are observed and classified according to flower petal color (white, pink, or orange) and whether or not they have a fragrance. The table gives the results. If a single azalea plant is selected at random, the probability that it has pink flower petals or no fragrance is A) 0.04 B) 0.635 C) 0.595 C Suppose that we have a deck of three cards, one marked with a 1, one marked with a 2, and one marked with a 5. You draw two cards at random and without replacement from the deck. The sample space S = {(1, 2), (1, 5), (2, 5)} consists of these three equally likely outcomes. Let X be the sum of the numbers on the two cards drawn. Which of the following is the correct probability distribution for X? A In a particular game, a ball is randomly chosen from a box that contains 3 red balls, 1 green ball, and 6 blue balls. If a red ball is selected, you win $2; if a green ball is selected, you win $4; if a blue ball is selected, you win nothing. Let X be the amount that you win. The expected value of X is A) $1 B) $2 C) $3 A Let X = the number of times that a customer visits a grocery store during a one-week period. Assume that the probability distribution of X is as follows: The standard deviation of X, σX, is approximately A) 1.5 B) 0.65 C) 0.81 C The time in minutes X that you must wait before a train arrives at your local subway station is a uniformly distributed random variable between 5 minutes and 15 minutes. That is, the density curve of the distribution of x has constant height between 5 and 15 and height 0 outside this interval. Determine P(6 < X < 8). A) 0.1 B) 0.5 C) 0.2 C The weight of a medium-sized orange selected at random from a large bin of oranges at a local supermarket is a random variable with mean μ = 12 ounces and standard deviation σ = 1.2 ounces. Suppose we independently select two oranges at random from the bin. The difference in the weights of the two oranges (the weight of the first orange minus the weight of the second orange) is a random variable with a standard deviation equal to A) 0 B) 1.7 C) 2.88 B There are 20 multiple-choice questions on an exam, each having four possible responses, of which only one is correct. Each question is worth 5 points if answered correctly. Suppose that a student guesses the answer to each question, with her guesses from question to question being independent. If the student needs at least 40 points to pass the exam, the probability that she passes is closest to A) 0.0609 B) 0.1018 C) 0.9591 B There are 20 multiple-choice questions on an exam, each having four possible responses, of which only one is correct. Each question is worth 5 points if answered correctly. Suppose that a student guesses the answer to each question, with her guesses from question to question being independent. The student’s expected (mean) score on this exam is A) 25 B) 5 C) 50 A In the gambling game of chuck-a-luck, three dice are rolled using a rotating, hourglass-shaped cage. The player chooses one of the 6 possible sides (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6) and receives a payoff the amount of which depends on how many dice turn up on that particular side. Let X = the number of times the dice have to be rolled until we see “three of a kind” (of any type). Which of the following probability distributions does X have? B In a certain large population, 70% are right-handed. You need a left-handed pitcher for your softball team and decide to find one by asking people chosen from the population at random. (We assume that once you do find a left-hander, he or she will be happy to join your team and will not say no.) The probability that the first left-hander you find is the fourth person you ask is approximately A) 0.1029 B) 0.019 C) 0.072 A For which of the following choices of n, p can we not use the normal approximation to the binomial distribution? C A news magazine claims that 30% of all New York City police officers are overweight. Indignant at this claim, the New York City police commissioner conducts a survey in which 200 randomly selected New York City police officers are weighed. 52, or 26%, of the surveyed officers turn out to be overweight. Which of the following statements about this situation is true? A As part of a promotion for a new type of cracker, free samples are offered to shoppers in a local supermarket. The probability that a shopper will buy a package of crackers after tasting the free sample is 0.2. Different shoppers can be regarded as independent trials. Let be the sample proportion of the next n shoppers that buy a packet of crackers after tasting a free sample. How large should n be so that the standard deviation of is no more than 0.01? A) 4 B) 16 C) 1600 C As part of a promotion for a new type of cracker, free samples are offered to shoppers in a local supermarket. The probability that a shopper will buy a package of crackers after tasting the free sample is 0.2. Different shoppers can be regarded as independent trials. Let be the sample proportion of the next 100 shoppers that buy a package of crackers after tasting a free sample. The probability that fewer than 30% of these individuals buy a package of crackers after tasting a sample is approximately (without using the continuity correction) A) 0.3 B) 0.9938 C) 0.0062 B The duration of Alzheimer’s disease, from the onset of symptoms until death, ranges from 3 to 20 years, with a mean of 8 years and a standard deviation of 4 years. The administrator of a large medical center randomly selects the medical records of 30 deceased Alzheimer’s patients and records the duration of the disease for each one. Find the probability that the average duration of the disease for the 30 patients will exceed 8.25 years. A) 0.6331 B) 0.3669 C) 0.4761 B The duration of Alzheimer’s disease, from the onset of symptoms until death, ranges from 3 to 20 years, with a mean of 8 years and a standard deviation of 4 years. The administrator of a large medical center randomly selects the medical records of 30 deceased Alzheimer’s patients and records the duration of the disease for each one. Find the probability that the average duration of the disease for the 30 patients will lie within 1 year of the overall mean of 8 years. A) 0.8294 B) 0.1706 C) 0.4147 A According to the "1.5 x IQR" rule, how many outliers are there in the data set 110, 144, 115, 123, 114, 118, 72, 156? A) None B) One C) Two B You have a set of data that you suspect may have come from a normal distribution. To assess normality, you construct a normal probability plot. Which of the following would constitute evidence that the data did actually arise from a normal distribution? A For 10 pairs of data (x, y), we obtain the following summary statistics: The 10 x-values have sample mean 0.30 and sample standard deviation 0.02. The 10 y-values have sample mean 0.28 and sample standard deviation 0.04. The correlation coefficient r = 0.896. The equation of the least-squares regression line of y on x is B Suppose that a scatterplot of log y versus x shows a strongly linear relationship with a value of r close to 1. Which of the following will then occur? B You would like to compare the level of mathematical knowledge among 15-year-olds in the United States and Japan. To do this, you plan to give a mathematics achievement test to random samples of 1000 15-year-olds in each of the two countries. To ensure that the samples will include individuals from all different socioeconomic groups and educational backgrounds, you will randomly select 200 students from low-income families, 400 students from middle-income families, and 400 students from highincome families in each country. The sampling procedure being used here is A) Simple Random B) Cluster C) Stratified C