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a sample size n=5 is selected from a population. under what conditions is the sampling distribution x normal?​

User JohnRW
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Answer:

Look below

Explanation:

The mean of the sampling distribution always equals the mean of the population.

μxˉ​=μ

The standard deviation of the sampling distribution is σ/√n, where n is the sample size

σxˉ​=σ/n​

When a variable in a population is normally distributed, the sampling distribution of for all possible samples of size n is also normally distributed.

If the population is N ( µ, σ) then the sample means distribution is N ( µ, σ/ √ n).

Central Limit Theorem: When randomly sampling from any population with mean µ and standard deviation σ, when n is large enough, the sampling distribution of is approximately normal: ~ N ( µ, σ/ √ n ).

How large a sample size?

It depends on the population distribution. More observations are required if the population distribution is far from normal.

A sample size of 25 is generally enough to obtain a normal sampling distribution from a strong skewness or even mild outliers.

A sample size of 40 will typically be good enough to overcome extreme skewness and outliers.

In many cases, n = 25 isn’t a huge sample. Thus, even for strange population distributions we can assume a normal sampling distribution of the mean and work with it to solve problems.

User Trikelef
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