. M&Ms and Aspirin A package label includes a claim that the mean weight of the M&Ms is 0.8535 g, and another package label includes the claim that the mean amount of aspirin in Bayer tablets is 325 mg. Which has more serious implications: rejection of the M&M claim or rejection of the aspirin claim? Is it wise to use the same significance level for hypothesis tests of both claims?
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Textbook Solutions for Elementary Statistics
Question
Forming Conclusions. In Exercises 912, refer to the exercise identified. Using only the rare event rule, make subjective estimates to determine whether results are likely, then state a conclusion about the original claim. For example, if the claim is that a coin favors heads and sample results consist of 11 heads in 20 flips, conclude that there is not sufficient evidence to support the claim that the coin favors heads (because it is easy to get 11 heads in 20 flips by chance with a fair coin). Exercise 5
Solution
The first step in solving 8-2 problem number 9 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: Forming Conclusions. In Exercises 912, refer to the exercise identified. Using only the rare event rule, make subjective estimates to determine whether results are likely, then state a conclusion about the original claim. For example, if the claim is that a coin favors heads and sample results consist of 11 heads in 20 flips, conclude that there is not sufficient evidence to support the claim that the coin favors heads (because it is easy to get 11 heads in 20 flips by chance with a fair coin). Exercise 5
From the textbook chapter Basics of Hypothesis Testing you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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