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Actual lengths of pregnancy terms for a particular species of mammal are nearly normally distributed about a mean pregnancy length with a standard deviation of 18 days. About what percentage of births would be expected to occur more than 54 days after the mean pregnancy​ length?

User Lekoaf
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1 Answer

25 votes
25 votes

Solution :

The data is normally distributed.

The standard deviation is 18 days

Here the data is normally distributed and 54 days is 3 days of standard deviation.

Therefore, the percentage of the births that would be
\text{expected to occur} within the 54 days of the mean
\text{pregnancy} length is given by :

= P( -3 < Z < 3)

= 0.9544

= 95 %

Therefore, about 95% of the births would be
\text{expected to occur} within 54 days of the men
\text{pregnancy} length.

User Viraj Doshi
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