Gasoline Many drivers of cars that can run on regular gas actually buy premium in the

Chapter 24, Problem 30

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Gasoline Many drivers of cars that can run on regular gas actually buy premium in the belief that they will get better gas mileage. To test that belief, we use 10 cars from a company fleet in which all the cars run on regular gas. Each car is filled first with either regular or premium gasoline, decided by a coin toss, and the mileage for that tankful is recorded. Then the mileage is recorded again for the same cars for a tankful of the other kind of gasoline. We dont let the drivers know about this experiment. Here are the results (miles per gallon): a) Is there evidence that cars get significantly better fuel economy with premium gasoline? b) How big might that difference be? Check a 90% confidence interval. c) Even if the difference is significant, why might the company choose to stick with regular gasoline? d) Suppose you had done a bad thing. (Were sure you didnt.) Suppose you had mistakenly treated these data as two independent samples instead of matched pairs. What would the significance test have found? Carefully explain why the results are so different.

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