Final answer:
If the salesman decides to also deal in cars priced under $5,000 and in cars $45,000 to $50,000 and projects sales of 200 cars in each category, the shape of the distribution would exhibit a positive skew.
Step-by-step explanation:
If the salesman decides to also deal in cars priced under $5,000 and in cars $45,000 to $50,000 and projects sales of 200 cars in each category, the shape of the distribution would exhibit a positive skew (b).
An additional category of cars priced under $5,000 would introduce a cluster of low-priced cars, which would result in a longer tail on the left side of the histogram, causing a positive skew. Similarly, adding a category of cars priced $45,000 to $50,000 would introduce a cluster of high-priced cars, resulting in a longer tail on the right side of the histogram.
This change in the distribution shape is because the new categories have extreme values (very low or very high prices) that shift the overall distribution towards the right.