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27 votes
g A sanitation supervisor is interested in testing to see if the mean amount of garbage per bin is different from 50. In a random sample of 36 bins, the sample mean amount was 50.67 pounds and the sample standard deviation was 3.9 pounds. Conduct the appropriate hypothesis test using a 0.01 level of significance.

User Dean Sha
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1 Answer

7 votes
7 votes

Answer:

We accept the null hypothesis, that is, the the mean amount of garbage per bin is not different from 50.

Explanation:

A sanitation supervisor is interested in testing to see if the mean amount of garbage per bin is different from 50.

This means that the null hypothesis is:


H_(0): \mu = 50

And the alternate hypothesis is:


H_(a): \mu \\eq 50

The test statistic is:


z = (X - \mu)/((\sigma)/(√(n)))

In which X is the sample mean,
\mu is the value tested at the null hypothesis,
\sigma is the standard deviation and n is the size of the sample.

50 tested at the null hypothesis:

This means that
\mu = 50

In a random sample of 36 bins, the sample mean amount was 50.67 pounds and the sample standard deviation was 3.9 pounds.

This means that
n = 36, X = 50.67, \sigma = 3.9

Value of the test statistic:


z = (X - \mu)/((\sigma)/(√(n)))


z = (50.67 - 50)/((3.9)/(√(36)))


z = 1.03

p-value:

Since we are testing if the mean is differente from a value and the z-score is positive, the pvalue is 2 multipled by 1 subtracted by the pvalue of z = 1.03.

z = 1.03 has a pvalue of 0.8485

1 - 0.8485 = 0.1515

2*0.1515 = 0.3030

0.3030 > 0.01, which means that we accept the null hypothesis, that is, the the mean amount of garbage per bin is not different from 50.

User Qutbuddin Bohra
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2.5k points
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