MATLAB: An Introduction with Applications
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781119256830
Author: Amos Gilat
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
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- Part 1: Use standardized scores to compare an outstanding athlete or team to the other athletes or teams that they competed against. For each of these, calculate the standardized score from the given information. Show all work. ( a ) How good was Babe Ruth's 1921 season compared to the rest of the Major League baseball players that year? Compare his total home runs hit that year to the other 132 players who had at least 300 plate appearances. In 1921 Babe Ruth hit 59 home runs while the mean home runs for the other players was 5.5 with a standard deviation of 5.6 home runs.arrow_forwardIn the class poll from the beginning of the year, you were asked what color car you drive. The results are summarized below. aqua 3 beige/tan/gold 39 black 80 blue 44 green 21 orange 3 pink 1 purple 3 red 45 silver 63 white 74 yellow 1 What is the mode for this data set?arrow_forwardBefore going to college, Chelsea wanted to see if she could sell her old car online. She selected a sample of the prices on 25 similar cars sold online in the past month. Later, Chelsea realized that the lowest-priced car in the sample was mistakenly recorded as half the price it actually sold for. However, after correcting the error, the corrected price was still less than or equal to any other car price in her sample. Which of the following sample statistics must have remained the same after the correction was made? Select one: 1.Range 2.Median 3.Mode 4.Variance 5.Meanarrow_forward
- Polls. America OnLine published a survey question. Among the 2,300 Internet users who responded, 20% answered “yes” and the others answered “no.” For the “yes” responses, what is the value of pn? What is fundamen-tally wrong with this survey?arrow_forwardI had to find the 20th percentile with the following data. 0, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 8..... My first answer was 1.8. I got that by doing .20(10) = 1.8. This answer was wrong. I rounded up to 2 and that was also wrong. Was I supposed to indentify all the numbers that would be categorized in the 20th percentile?arrow_forwardRecherchers conducted two surveys about teens are their use of social media. The First survey asked a Random sample of 800 U.S. teens about their use of Instagram. A second survey asked the same question to a Random sample of 2253 Canadian teens. In these two studies. 73% of U.S. teens and 88% of Canadian teens said that they use instagram. Use these results to answee the following questions about the proportion of U.S. and Canadian teens that use instagram. (Round to the nearest whole hundredth as needed).arrow_forward
- When you hear thw words “population” and “sample,” what comes first in your mind?arrow_forwardThe council leaders of a small town would like to determine the average number of people living in each household. To accomplish this, they send a questionnaire to each residence listed in the town address records, asking the head of the household to record the number of people living in the dwelling. They follow this up with visits to those households that have not responded to the questionnaire until the data collection process is complete. Which of the following is the best description of the method for data collection used by the council leaders? (A) A convenience sample (B) A simple random sample (C) A stratified random sample (D) A cluster random sample (E) A censusarrow_forwardCris Turlock owns and manages a small business in San Francisco, California. The business provides breakfast and brunch food, via carts parked along sidewalks, to people in the business district of the city. Being an experienced businessperson, Cris provides incentives for the salespeople operating the food carts. This year, she plans to offer monetary bonuses to her salespeople based on their individual mean daily sales. Her first task is to see if there is a significant difference in the mean daily sales among the different salespeople. She chooses a "sample" of days for each salesperson and records the sales for each day. She then runs a one-way, independent-samples ANOVA test to determine whether or not she can conclude that at least one salesperson's performances is significantly different from the others. (Otherwise, she'll split the bonuses evenly among all the salespeople.) In her ANOVA, the "groups" are the different salespeople, and the variable of interest is the daily sales…arrow_forward
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