Final answer:
The statistic used to construct the confidence interval is the proportion of American adults that drink coffee regularly. The 95% confidence interval does not mean there's a 95% chance that the percentage of American adults that drink coffee regularly is between 34% and 48%.
Step-by-step explanation:
(a) The statistic used to construct this confidence interval is the proportion of American adults that drink coffee regularly. The symbol for this statistic is p-hat, and in this case, the value is between 0.34 and 0.48.
(b) To find the number of American adults in the 210-person sample who drink coffee regularly, we multiply the proportion by the sample size. So, the number of American adults who drink coffee regularly is between 0.34 * 210 = 71.4 and 0.48 * 210 = 100.8.
(c) The margin of error in the 95% confidence interval can be found by subtracting the lower bound from the upper bound. So, the margin of error is 0.48 - 0.34 = 0.14.
(d) The 95% confidence interval does not mean there's a 95% chance that the percentage of American adults that drink coffee regularly is between 34% and 48%. Instead, it means that if we were to repeat the study multiple times, 95% of the confidence intervals constructed using the same method would contain the true proportion of American adults who drink coffee regularly.