A genetic experiment involving peas yielded one sample of offspring consisting of 423 green peas and 125 yellow peas. Use a 0.01 significance level to test the claim that under the same circumstances, 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. Ident the null hypothesis, alternative hypothesis, test statistic, P-value, conclusion about the null hypothesis, and final conclusion that addresses the original claim. Use the P-value method and the normal distribution as an approximation to the binomia distribution. What are the null and alternative hypotheses? OA. Ho: P 0.27 H₁: p<0.27 OC. Ho: p*0.27 H₁: p=0.27 OE. Ho: p*0.27 H₁: p>0.27 What is the test statistic? =-2.21 (Round to two decimal places as needed.) What is the P-value? P-value = 0.0272 (Round to four decimal places as needed.) What is the conclusion about the null hypothesis? OA. Fail to reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is greater than the significance level, c. OB. Fail to reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is less than or equal to the significance level, a. OC. Reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is less than or equal to the significance level, a. OD. Reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is greater than the significance level, a. What is the final conclusion? OA. There is sufficient evidence to support the claim that less than 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OB. There is not sufficient evidence to warrant rejection of the claim that 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OC. There is sufficient evidence to warrant rejection of the claim that 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OD. There is not sufficient evidence to support the claim that less than 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. B. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p=0.27 OD. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p>0.27 OF. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p<0.27
A genetic experiment involving peas yielded one sample of offspring consisting of 423 green peas and 125 yellow peas. Use a 0.01 significance level to test the claim that under the same circumstances, 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. Ident the null hypothesis, alternative hypothesis, test statistic, P-value, conclusion about the null hypothesis, and final conclusion that addresses the original claim. Use the P-value method and the normal distribution as an approximation to the binomia distribution. What are the null and alternative hypotheses? OA. Ho: P 0.27 H₁: p<0.27 OC. Ho: p*0.27 H₁: p=0.27 OE. Ho: p*0.27 H₁: p>0.27 What is the test statistic? =-2.21 (Round to two decimal places as needed.) What is the P-value? P-value = 0.0272 (Round to four decimal places as needed.) What is the conclusion about the null hypothesis? OA. Fail to reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is greater than the significance level, c. OB. Fail to reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is less than or equal to the significance level, a. OC. Reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is less than or equal to the significance level, a. OD. Reject the null hypothesis because the P-value is greater than the significance level, a. What is the final conclusion? OA. There is sufficient evidence to support the claim that less than 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OB. There is not sufficient evidence to warrant rejection of the claim that 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OC. There is sufficient evidence to warrant rejection of the claim that 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. OD. There is not sufficient evidence to support the claim that less than 27% of offspring peas will be yellow. B. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p=0.27 OD. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p>0.27 OF. Ho: p=0.27 H₁: p<0.27
Calculus For The Life Sciences
2nd Edition
ISBN:9780321964038
Author:GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Chapter13: Probability And Calculus
Section13.2: Expected Value And Variance Of Continuous Random Variables
Problem 10E
Related questions
Question
Please answer the last two questions please
Expert Solution
This question has been solved!
Explore an expertly crafted, step-by-step solution for a thorough understanding of key concepts.
This is a popular solution!
Trending now
This is a popular solution!
Step by step
Solved in 3 steps with 5 images
Recommended textbooks for you
Calculus For The Life Sciences
Calculus
ISBN:
9780321964038
Author:
GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:
Pearson Addison Wesley,
Calculus For The Life Sciences
Calculus
ISBN:
9780321964038
Author:
GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:
Pearson Addison Wesley,