1. Hypotheses. Write the null and alternative hypotheses you would use to test each of the following situations: a) A governor is concerned about his negativesthe percentage of state residents who express disapproval of his job performance. His political committee pays for a series of TV ads, hoping that they can keep the negatives below 30%. They will use follow-up polling to assess the ads effectiveness. b) Is a coin fair? c) Only about 20% of people who try to quit smoking succeed. Sellers of a motivational tape claim that listening to the recorded messages can help people quit.
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Textbook Solutions for Stats: Modeling The World
Question
6. Cars. A survey investigating whether the proportion of today's high school seniors who own their own cars is higher than it was a decade ago finds a P-value of 0.017. Is it reasonable to conclude that more high-schoolers have cars? Explain.
Solution
The first step in solving 20 problem number 6 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: 6. Cars. A survey investigating whether the proportion of today's high school seniors who own their own cars is higher than it was a decade ago finds a P-value of 0.017. Is it reasonable to conclude that more high-schoolers have cars? Explain.
From the textbook chapter Testing Hypotheses About Proportions you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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