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Mathematics, 05.05.2020 12:15 jadea520

Can somebody help me please


Can somebody help me please

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Mathematics, 22.06.2019 03:50, aliyahgregory
Amovie producer conducted a survey after the screening of his movie to find out how the film would be received by viewers from different age groups. the columns in the two-way table indicate the numbers of viewers who rated the film on a four-point scale: excellent, good, average, and poor. viewer's age group excellent good average poor marginal totals 16-25 52 42 12 7 113 26-35 33 50 5 9 97 36-45 58 12 28 34 132 which of these observations is supported by the data in the table? note: a rating of good or excellent means the audience liked the movie, while a rating of poor means the audience disliked the movie. a. the majority of the audience in the 26-35 age group disliked the movie. b. among those who liked the movie, the majority were in the oldest age group. c. among those who disliked the movie, the majority were in the 26-35 age group. d. the majority of the audience in the 16-25 age group liked the movie. e. the majority of the audience from all the age groups disliked the movie
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Mathematics, 22.06.2019 05:50, raquelqueengucci25
Amodified roulette wheel has 36 slots. one slot is 0, another is 00, and the others are numbered 1 through 34, respectively. you are placing a bet that the outcome is an odd number. (in roulette, 0 and 00 are neither odd nor even.) a. what is your probability of winning? the probability of winning is startfraction 17 over 36 endfraction . (type an integer or a simplified fraction.) b. what are the actual odds against winning? the actual odds against winning are nothing: nothing. c. when you bet that the outcome is an odd number, the payoff odds are 1: 1. how much profit do you make if you bet $10 and win? if you win, the payoff is $ nothing. d. how much profit should you make on the $10 bet if you could somehow convince the casino to change its payoff odds so that they are the same as the actual odds against winning? $ nothing (round to the nearest cent as needed.)
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Mathematics, 22.06.2019 07:50, xelynncaldera
Assume the population consists of the values 1, 3, 14. assume samples of 2 values are randomly selected with replacement (see page 23 for a definition) from this population. all the samples of n=2 with replacement are 1 and 1, 1 and 3, 1 and 14, 3 and 1, 3 and 3, 3 and 14, 14 and 1, 14 and 3, and 14 and 14. for part a) of this project, find the variance σ2 of the population {1, 3, 14}. for part b) of this project, list the 9 different possible samples of 2 values selected with replacement, then find sample variance s2 (which includes division by n-1) for each of them, and finally find the mean of the sample variances s2. for part c), for each of the 9 different samples of 2 values selected with replacement, find the variance by treating each sample as if it is a population (using the formula for population variance, which includes division by n), then find the mean of those population variances. for part d), which approach results in values that are better estimates of σ2 from part a): part b) or part c)? why? when computing variances of samples, should you use division by n or n-1? upload your answers for a), b), c), and d). the preceding parts show that s2 is an unbiased estimator of σ2. is s and unbiased estimator of σ? the above problem is from triola’s essentials of statistics, 4th edition.
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Mathematics, 22.06.2019 09:00, jordystafford8186
The 10 acre field produced 750 bushels of corn at that rate how much corn can be produced from a 14 acre field
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