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t-test Problems
- The datasets for these problems are found in the Excel file
t-test1.xls.
- In 1998, as an adverting campaign, a cookie company claimed that
every 18-ounce bag contained an an average of 1000 chocolate chips.
Students at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs bought some randomly
selected bags of cookies and counted the chocolate chips. Some of
their data are recorded on the ChocolateChips dataset of the
Excel file.
- Form the normal plot of the chocolate chip counts. Are the
counts normally distributed?
- Perform a 99%-level test of hypothesis that the average chocolate
chip count is 1000 per bag.
- Psychology experiments involve testing the ability of rate to navigate
mazes. The mazes are classified according to difficulty, as measured by
the average length of time it takes rats to find the food at the end.
One researcher needs a maze that will take rats an average of about one
minute to solve. He tests one maze on several rats, collecting the
data on the RatMaze spreadsheet in the Excel file.
- Form the normal plot and box plot of the maze times. Are the
times normally distributed?
- Test the hypothesis that the true completion time is one minute.
- Eliminate the outlier and perform the hypothesis test again.
- A food company marks the net weight of their potato chip bags as
28.3 grams. To test whether this claim is true, students collect and
measure the net weights of bags. The measurements are recorded on
the PotatoChipBags spreadsheet in the Excel file.
- Form the normal plot of the new weights of the potato chip bags.
Are the weights normally distributed?
- Test the hypothesis that the true weight of potato chip
bags is 28.3 grams.