Asked by Anonymous
1. Conduct a hypothesis test for the following scenario. SHOW ALL YOUR WORK THE WAY WE DID IN CLASS!
A coffee-dispensing machine is supposed to deliver 12 ounces of liquid into a large paper cup, but the costumer believes that the actual amount is less. As a test he plans to obtain a sample of 30 cups of the dispensed liquid. The mean of his sample is 11.5 ounces. The machine operates with a known standard deviation of σ = 1.1 ounces. Is there enough evidence at the α = .05 level for him to claim the machine is broken?
A coffee-dispensing machine is supposed to deliver 12 ounces of liquid into a large paper cup, but the costumer believes that the actual amount is less. As a test he plans to obtain a sample of 30 cups of the dispensed liquid. The mean of his sample is 11.5 ounces. The machine operates with a known standard deviation of σ = 1.1 ounces. Is there enough evidence at the α = .05 level for him to claim the machine is broken?
Answers
Answered by
PsyDAG
I don't know how you did it in class.
Z = (score-mean)/SEm
SEm = SD/√n
Find table in the back of your statistics text labeled something like "areas under normal distribution" to find the proportion/probability for the Z score. How does it compare to your alpha level?
Z = (score-mean)/SEm
SEm = SD/√n
Find table in the back of your statistics text labeled something like "areas under normal distribution" to find the proportion/probability for the Z score. How does it compare to your alpha level?
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