69.0k views
5 votes
A statement that "the 95% confidence interval for the population mean is (275, 325)" means that 95% of the population values are between 275 and 325.

a. true
b. false

User Mudassar
by
7.5k points

1 Answer

0 votes

Final answer:

The correct answer is False. The statement is false. A 95% confidence interval indicates that there is a 95% confidence level that the true population mean is within the given interval, not that 95% of the population values are within those numbers.

Step-by-step explanation:

The statement that "the 95% confidence interval for the population mean is (275, 325)" does not mean that 95% of the population values lie between 275 and 325. This is a misunderstanding of what a confidence interval represents. A confidence interval in statistics provides a range of values within which there is a specified level of confidence (in this case, 95%) that the true population parameter (like the mean) will fall. It's not about the percentage of individual data points or population values within that range; rather, it's about the certainty that the range includes the true population parameter.

To elaborate, if we say that we are 95% confident in the interval, we mean that if we were to take multiple samples and calculate a confidence interval from each of them, we would expect about 95% of those intervals to contain the true population mean. The width of the interval also plays a role; a 95% confidence interval will be wider than a 90% confidence interval because it requires more certainty about including the true mean.

Therefore, when interpreting a 95% confidence interval, one should clearly articulate that we are estimating that the true population mean lies within the given range with a 95% level of confidence. This interpretation is foundational to statistical inference and is crucial to accurately convey what confidence intervals mean in the context of statistical analysis.

User Dyasta
by
7.5k points