Answer:
Explanation:
Hello!
You need to test the hypothesis that "the average temperature for healthy adults is not equal to 98.6"
The variable of interest is
X: The body temperature of a healthy adult. (Fahrenheit)
And the parameter of interest is the population mean, μ.
The statistic hypotheses are:
H₀: μ = 98.6
H₁: μ ≠ 98.6
α:0.05
Assuming that the variable has a normal distribution you have to use a one-sample t-statistic for this test.
Attached to the answer is the data of body temperature of n=19 healthy adults. Since you didn't copy the raw data for your exercise I'll use this to answer the question.
Using the data the sample mean and standard deviation are:
X[bar]= 98.12
S= 0.69
This test is two-tailed, using the critical value approach, you have the rejection region divided into two tails determined by two critical values:
Decision rule:
If
≤ -1.965 or if
≥ 1.965, the decision is to reject the null hypothesis.
If -1.965 <
< 1.965, the decision is to not reject the null hypothesis.
The calculated statistic is less than the lower critical value, the decision is to reject the null hypothesis.
Using a significance level of 5%, there is enough evidence to reject the null hypothesis. Then you can conclude that the true mean body temperature for healthy adults is not equal to the traditional 98.6F.
I hope this helps!