Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1 49 Calculate:
2 15 Mean 38.3
3 43 Median 41
4 45 Mode 5
5 40 Range 9
6 35 Standard Deviation 9.88883
7 42
8 38
9 46
10 30
Observation Age
Murders
70; 63.64% 0 10 20
Crime Rate Percentage
Smuggl ing
Ki dnapping
Thef
Murders
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
class interval frequency Cumilative Frequency Draw:
20-30 3 3 Histogram
30-40 12 15 Polygon
40-50 20 35 Ogive
50-60 11 46
60-70 4 50
Histogram Polygon
25 25 60
20 50
20
Class Interval
15 40
15
10 30
5 10
20
0
5 10
frequency
3
Frequency 0 0
1 2 3 4 5 1
Ogive
60
50
50 46
40
35
30
20
15
10
3
0
1 2 3 4 5
Observation Age Expenditures
1 49 95 Find:
2 15 104 Correlation
3 43 91 Regression
Regression equation and predicted expenditure when age is 3
4 45 98
5 40 94
6 35 107
7 42 96
8 38 108 Corelation
9 46 98 Age Expenditures
10 30 108 Age 1
Expenditur -0.59553 1
Y=Mx=C
Y= 98.82391
M -0.93257
x 35
C 131.4639
expenditure when age is 35
SUMMARY OUTPUT
ANOVA
df SS MS F Significance F
Regression 1 312.1318 312.1318 4.396468 0.069284
Residual 8 567.9682 70.99603
Total 9 880.1
Coefficients
Standard Error t Stat P-value Lower 95%Upper 95%
Lower 95.0%
Upper 95.0%
Intercept 131.4639 44.51181 2.953461 0.018328 28.81949 234.1083 28.81949 234.1083
Expenditur -0.93257 0.444765 -2.09678 0.069284 -1.9582 0.093057 -1.9582 0.093057
Upper 95.0%
Number of Factors in the Market Find:
Month Price (Y) X1 X2 X3 X4 Correlation
1 23000 30 100 205 75 Regression
Regression equation and predicted price
2 25000 38 120 180 90
3 27000 50 80 140 150
4 19000 20 90 120 100 CORRELATION
5 20000 67 50 160 80
6 27000 90 75 210 105 Price (Y)
7 25500 20 110 190 110 Price (Y) 1
8 21500 15 120 175 80 X1 0.52018
9 26000 60 85 125 140 X2 -0.01139
10 22000 20 90 100 140 X3 0.399827
11 22800 20 70 150 130 X4 0.461066
12 26500 72 60 200 120
Coefficients
Standard Error t Stat P-value Lower 95%Upper 95%
Lower 95.0%
Upper 95.0%
Intercept -3967.58 1740.655 -2.27936 0.05669 -8083.57 148.4187 -8083.57 148.4187
X1 56.77537 9.461567 6.000631 0.000542 34.40232 79.14842 34.40232 79.14842
X2 64.26552 9.8352 6.534236 0.000324 41.00897 87.52208 41.00897 87.52208
X3 52.98701 6.18387 8.568584 5.86E-05 38.36448 67.60954 38.36448 67.60954
X4 101.0161 7.699234 13.12028 3.49E-06 82.81031 119.2219 82.81031 119.2219
on equation and predicted price when X1, X2, X3 and X4 factors are 50, 75, 150 and 100
X1 X2 X3 X4
1
-0.61925 1
0.351734 0.091275 1
0.082839 -0.28575 -0.55134 1
+BX2+BX3+BX4
Upper 95.0%
Graduate students pass out from two colleges (X and Y). It is expected that the performance in term of placement from colleege X is better than from college Y. To
test this assertion an independent head-hunting firm collects samples from Colleges X and Y and measures what is the number of placements over the last few
semesters. Both population variances are known (σX = 20, σY = 27). Conduct an appropriate test to test this hypothesis.
X Y
108 72 State Hypothesis
125 91 Since there are two variables and samples are more than 30 it is two sample Z test and because it states X is better than Y it is one tail right test
89 81
144 84 Set Level of Significance
Before After
Person Sugar Sugar
Level Level
1 303 155
2 285 164
3 351 144
4 360 140
5 251 142
6 358 191
7 145 142
8 312 194
9 287 153
10 143 173
11 390 153
12 330 185
13 303 137
14 331 177
15 298 193
16 198 163
17 377 189
18 389 196
19 212 133
20 284 121
21 339 141
22 232 155
23 302 148
24 240 170
25 358 150
Based upon collected data the average sale per day of Ford Cars has estimated to be 10 units in NCR and the sales data are approximately normally
distributed. To test this hypothesis the market research company has collected the sales data for a week (Units): 14, 8, 13, 10, 8, 6 and 17. Test whether the
sales volume on average has changed.
Suppose the GDGU wants to examine the Average IQ Level (in a scale of 100) of the students of four Schools; SOE, SOM, SOHSS and SOL. It collects a sample
of three for each of the Schools. Using the hypothetical data provided below, test whether the mean IQ is equal for each type of school in the University.