Answer:
(1 , -2)
Step-by-step explanation:
The intersecting point of two lines is the solution
Answer: A. Repeated results if the player makes 75% of his shots in the long run.
Step-by-step explanation:
The null distribution is always the opposite of the alternative distribution which in most cases represents the claim or hypothesis which is to be tested or performed. In the scenario given, the challenge is to show that a basketball player has an average higher than that of the NBA. NBA average stands at 75%. The alternative hypothesis is the claim, which is ;
H1 : μ > 75%
THE null is thus :
H0 : μ = 75% ; which means that repeated result of the player will yields an average of 75%
The circumference is greater than 33 centimeters, it stands somewhere around 11 π.
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Hello!
For me, the first step to any statistics exercise is to determine what is the variable of interest and it's distribution.
In this example the variable is:
X: height of a college student. (cm)
There is no information about the variable distribution. To estimate the population mean you need a variable with at least a normal distribution since the mean is a parameter of it.
The option you have is to apply the Central Limit Theorem.
The central limit theorem states that if you have a population with probability function f(X;μ,δ²) from which a random sample of size n is selected. Then the distribution of the sample mean tends to the normal distribution with mean μ and variance δ²/n when the sample size tends to infinity.
As a rule, a sample of size greater than or equal to 30 is considered sufficient to apply the theorem and use the approximation.
The sample size in this exercise is n=50 so we can apply the theorem and approximate the distribution of the sample mean to normal:
X[bar]~~N(μ;σ2/n)
Thanks to this approximation you can use an approximation of the standard normal to calculate the confidence interval:
98% CI
1 - α: 0.98
⇒α: 0.02
α/2: 0.01

X[bar] ± 
174.5 ± 
[172.22; 176.78]
With a confidence level of 98%, you'd expect that the true average height of college students will be contained in the interval [172.22; 176.78].
I hope it helps!
They ended in the early 1990s