Suppose that you are testing the hypotheses
A sample of size 16 results in a sample mean of 11.5 and a sample standard deviation of 1.6.
What is the standard error of the mean?
Do men and women differ in their attitudes toward public corruption and tax evasion? This was the question of interest in a study published in Contemporary Economic Policy (Oct. 2010). The data for the analysis were obtained from a representative sample of over 30,000 Europeans. Each person was asked how justifiable it is for someone to (1) accept a bribe in the course of their duties and (2) cheat on their taxes. Responses were measured as 0, 1, 2, or 3, where O = "always justified" and 3 = "never justified." The large-sample Wilcoxon rank sum test was applied in order to compare the response distributions of men and women.
a. Give the null hypothesis for the test in the words of the problem.
b. An analysis of the "justifiability of corruption" responses yielded a large-sample test statistic of
c. Refer to part b. Women had a larger rank sum statistic than men. What does this imply about gender attitudes. toward corruption?
d. An analysis of the "justifiability of tax evasion" responses yielded a large-sample test statistic of
e. Refer to part d. Again, women had a larger rank sum statistic than men. What does this imply about gender attitudes toward tax evasion?
Maurice and Lester are twins who have just graduated from college. They have both been offered jobs where their take-home pay would be $2500 per month. Their parents have given Maurice and Lester two options for a graduation gift. Option 1: If they choose to pursue a graduate degree, their parents will give each of them a gift of $35,000. However, they must pay for their tuition and living expenses out of the gift. Option 2: If they choose to go directly into the workforce, their parents will give each of them a gift of $5000. Maurice decides to go to graduate school for 2 years. He locks in a tuition rate by paying $11,500 for the 2 years in advance, and he figures that his monthly expenses will be $1000. Lester decides to go straight into the workforce. Lester finds that after paying his rent, utilities, and other living expenses, he will be able to save $200 per month. Their parents deposit the appropriate amount of money in a money market account for each twin. The money market accounts are currently paying a nominal interest rate of 3 percent, compounded monthly. Lester works during the time that Maurice attends graduate school. Each month, Lester saves $200 and deposits this amount into the $5000 money market account that his parents set up for him when he graduated. If Lester's initial balance is
Refer to the Journal of Applied Psychology (Jan. 2011) study of the determinants of task performance. In addition to
Conscientiousness
Job Complexity
Emotional Stability
Organizational Citizenship
Counterproductive Work
For the following exercises, enter the data from each table into a graphing calculator and graph the resulting scatter plots. Determine whether the data from the table could represent a function that is linear, exponential, or logarithmic.
1) If A and B are mutually exclusive events with
2) An experiment consists of four outcomes with
3) If A and B are mutually exclusive events with
4) The empirical rule states that, for data having a bell-shaped distribution, the percentage of data values being within one standard deviation of the mean is approximately
5) If a penny is tossed four times and comes up heads all four times, the probability of heads on the fifth trial is ?
You randomly survey students at your school about what type of books they like to read. The two-way table shows your results. Find and interpret the marginal frequencies.
If
Advances in medical science and healthier lifestyles have resulted in longer life expectancies. The life expectancy of a female whose current age is x years old is