A.6 Answer: TW 6 tutorial
Answers for Sect. 6.2
Answers embedded. Some answers:
1. In order from left to right: \(70\); \(85\); \(100\); \(115\); \(130\). 3. \(30\) points above the mean. 4. Two standard deviations above the mean. 5. About \(2.5\)%.
A person with an IQ of \(85\) has an IQ that is 15 points below the mean, equivalent to 1 standard deviation(s) below the mean IQ. Using the 68--\(95\)--\(99.7\) rule, the proportion of the population with an IQ less than \(85\) is about 32%. In addition, the proportion of the population with an IQ above \(85\) is about 68%.
Answers for Sect. 6.3
- Answers vary.
- Answers vary.
- Answers vary.
- Answers vary. You probably cannot be very accurate using the \(68\)--\(95\)--\(99.7\) rule.
- Answers vary.
- Two standard deviations from the mean is \(2\times 6.7 = 13.4\), so \(95\)% of females aged \(18\) and over have a measured height between \(161.4 \pm13.4\) approximately, or from \(148.0\)cm to \(174.8\)cm.
- As follows:
- \(z = (171 - 161.4)/6.7 = 1.43\), so the probability is \(0.9236\) or about \(92\)%.
- So the odds are \(92.36/(100 - 92.36) = 12.1\).
- The answer is just \(1 - 0.9236 = 0.0764\) or about \(7.6\)%.
- The probability of over 171cm is \(7.64\)%.
- So the odds are \(7.64/(100 - 7.64)= 0.084\).
- \(z\)-scores are \(1.28\) and \(2.78\), so the answer is \(0.9973 - 0.8997 = 0.0976\), or about \(9.8\)%.
- So the odds are \(9.8/(100 - 9.8) = 0.11\).
- Use the Tables: \(z = -0.84\); then using unstandardising formula, the height is \(x = \mu + (z\times\sigma) = 161.4 + (-0.84\times6.7) = 155.772\), or about \(156\) cm.
Answers for Sect. 6.4
Answers embedded.
Relative frequency. Relative frequency. Subjective. Relative frequency. Classical.
Answers for Sect. 6.5
- Depends on data.
- Looking close to normal, centred around \(0.5\)-ish.
- We'd have an approximate normal distribution with mean \(\mu_{\hat{p}} = 0.5\) and standard deviation \(\text{s.e.}(\hat{p}) = \sqrt{0.5 \times (1 - 0.5)/10} \approx 0.158\).
- Still normal; same mean; but standard deviation would be smaller: \(\text{s.e.}(\hat{p}) = \sqrt{0.5 \times (1 - 0.5)/50} \approx 0.071\).
Answers for Sect. 6.6.1
- \(z = (20 - 0)/10 = 2\). The area or probability to the right is \(0.0228\), or about \(2.3\)%.
- The probability the SOI exceeds \(20\): \(2.3\)%. So odds: \(2.3\div(100 - 2.3)\), or about \(0.024\).
- \(z = (-25 - 0)/10 = -2.5\). The area to the left is \(0.0062\), or about \(0.6\)%.
- \(z = (-12 - 0)/10 = -1.2\). The area to the right is \(0.8849\), or about \(88.5\)%.
- The two \(z\)-scores: \((-10 - 0)/10 = -1\) and \((20 - 0)/10 = 2\). The area between these is \(0.9772 - 0.1587 = 0.8185\), or about \(81.9\)%.
- The \(z\) score corresponds to an area of \(0.80\) to the left; from the tables, about \(z = 0.84\). This corresponds to an SOI of \(0 + (0.84\times 10)\), or an SOI of about \(8.4\).
- The \(z\)-score is \(0.385\) from Appendix 3 in the textbook, remembering that the area to the left would be \(0.650\) (draw a diagram!). So, the \(z\)-score is \(0.385\), so that the SOI values is \(x = \mu + (z\times\sigma) = 0 + (0.385\times 10) = 3.85\).