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graph the set of points. which model is most appropriate for the set? (–2, 10), (–1,1), (1, 1), (2, 10) quadratic exponential linear

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7 votes

Don't pick exponential it's wrong if that helps

User Goodfellow
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8.4k points
3 votes

Answer

quadratic

Step-by-step explanation

When you graph the set of points (picture 1), you realize that the first and fourth points have the same y-coordinate and the x-coordinate of the fourth point is the x-coordinate of the first point multiplied by -1. The same also applies for the second and third points. This is the typical behavior of a quadratic graph. Remember that the quadratic function is always symmetric about a line, so every point will have a reflection about that line. Since (2, 10 ) is a reflection of the point (-2, 10) about the y-axis and the same can be said of (1, 1) and (-1, 1), we can conclude that our model is quadratic.

You can rule out a linear model because no straight line pass through (or near) all points. You can also rule out an exponential model because the function is decreasing and then increasing; exponential models either grow (increase) or decay.

As bonus, the equation of the quadratic graph that model the situation is:
f(x)=(5)/(2) x^2

graph the set of points. which model is most appropriate for the set? (–2, 10), (–1,1), (1, 1), (2, 10) quadratic-example-1
User Banesto
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8.3k points

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