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A study claimed residents in a suburb town spend at most 1.9 hours per weekday commuting to and from their jobs. A researcher believed commute times were now different and wants to test this claim by sampling 14 adults. Sample statistics for these 14 adults are: X = 2.2 $=0.7 Can the researcher support the claim that mean commuting time is more than 1.9 hours ? Test using a =.01.

User Kitson
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

There is no sufficient evidence to support the claim that mean commuting time is more than 1.9 hours

Explanation:

From the question we are told that

The population mean is
\mu = 1.9 \ hr

The sample mean is
\= x = 2.2

The standard deviation is
\sigma = 0.7

The sample size is
n = 14

The level of significance is
\alpha = 0.01

The null hypothesis is
H_o : \mu = 1.9 \ hr

The alternative hypothesis is
H_a : \mu > 1.9 \ hr

Generally the test statistics is mathematically represented as


t = (\= x - \mu )/( (\sigma)/( √(n) ) )


t = ( 2.2 - 1.9 )/( (0.7 )/( √(14) ) )


t = 1.6036

The p-value is obtained from the z-table, the value is


p-value = P(t > 1.6036) = 0.054401

Looking at the value of
p-value \ and \ \alpha we see that
p-value > \alpha

So we fail reject the null hypothesis

Hence we can conclude that there is no sufficient evidence to support the claim that mean commuting time is more than 1.9 hours

User Mayur Dabhi
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