Technology. In Exercises 9–12, test the given claim by using the display provided from technology. Use a 0.05 significance level. Identify the null and alternative hypotheses, test statistic, P-value (or range of P-values), or critical value(s), and state the final conclusion that addresses the original claim.

Body Temperatures Data Set 3 “Body Temperatures” in Appendix B includes 93 body temperatures measured at 12 ²³ on day 1 of a study, and the accompanying XLSTAT display results from using those data to test the claim that the mean body temperature is equal to 98.6°F. Conduct the hypothesis test using these results.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The hypotheses are as follows.

H0:μ=98.6°FH1:μ98.6°F

The test statistic is -7.102.

The p-value is <0.0001.

The null hypothesis is rejected, and it is concluded that there is not sufficient evidence to support the claim that the population mean of the body temperatures is equal to .

Step by step solution

01

Given information

A sample is taken from body temperatures with a sample size of 93 with the claim that the population mean of the body temperature is equal to .

02

State the hypotheses

The null hypothesis H0represents the mean body temperature equal to 98.6 degree. Also, the alternate hypothesis H1represents the mean body temperature, which is not equal to 98.6 degree .

Let μbe the population mean of the body temperatures.

State the null and alternate hypotheses.

H0:μ=98.6°FH1:μ98.6°F

03

State the test statistic and the p-value from the summary given 

State the test statistic and the p-value obtained from the second row and the fourth row of the given output, respectively. The critical value can also be observed from the third row.

tobserved-7.102p - valueTwo-Tailed<0.0001tcritical1.986

04

State the decision

Reject the null hypothesis when the absolute value of the observed test statistics is greater than the critical value. Otherwise, fail to reject the null hypothesis.

In this case,

-7.102=7.102>1.986tobserved>tcritical.

The absolute value of the observed test statistic is significantly larger than the critical value. This implies that the null hypothesis is rejected.

05

Conclusion

As the null hypothesis is rejected, it can be concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support the claim that the population mean of the body temperature is equal to 98.6 degree.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

In Exercises 1–4, use these results from a USA Today survey in which 510 people chose to respond to this question that was posted on the USA Today website: “Should Americans replace passwords with biometric security (fingerprints, etc)?” Among the respondents, 53% said “yes.” We want to test the claim that more than half of the population believes that passwords should be replaced with biometric security.

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