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In a study of the accuracy of fast food​ drive-through orders, Restaurant A had 332 accurate orders and 52 that were not accurate. a. Construct a ​90% confidence interval estimate of the percentage of orders that are not accurate. b. Compare the results from part​ (a) to this ​90% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant​ B: 0.124 < p < 0.181. What do you​ conclude?

User Jelphy
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a. The 90% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant A is 0.089 < p < 0.181.

b. This overlap suggests that we cannot conclusively say whether Restaurant A has a significantly different percentage of inaccurate orders compared to Restaurant B.

a. Constructing the 90% Confidence Interval for Restaurant A

Step 1: Calculate the sample proportion:

Let P be the sample proportion of inaccurate orders.

P = number of inaccurate orders / total number of orders

P = 52 orders / 384 orders = 0.135

Step 2: Determine the standard error:

SE = sqrt(P * (1 - P) / n)

SE = sqrt(0.135 * (1 - 0.135) / 384) ≈ 0.023

Step 3: Find the critical value (z):

We need a 90% confidence interval, so the confidence level is 1 - 0.9 = 0.1.

Since the normal distribution is symmetrical, half of the confidence level (0.05) is in each tail.

Using a z-table or calculator, we find the z-score that corresponds to an area of 0.95 in the right tail: z ≈ 1.645

Step 4: Calculate the confidence interval:

Lower bound = P - z * SE

Lower bound = 0.135 - 1.645 * 0.023 ≈ 0.089

Upper bound = P + z * SE

Upper bound = 0.135 + 1.645 * 0.023 ≈ 0.181

Therefore, the 90% confidence interval for the percentage of orders that are not accurate at Restaurant A is 0.089 < p < 0.181.

b. Comparing the Confidence Intervals for Restaurant A and B

Comparison:

Restaurant A: 0.089 < p < 0.181

Restaurant B: 0.124 < p < 0.181

The confidence intervals overlap, meaning they share some common values for the true proportion of inaccurate orders.

This overlap suggests that we cannot conclusively say whether Restaurant A has a significantly different percentage of inaccurate orders compared to Restaurant B.

More data or a different confidence level might be needed to draw a more definitive conclusion.

User Basj
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