Don’t call me In a September 28,2008, article titled “Letting Our Fingers Do the Talking,” the New York Times reported that Americans now send more text messages than they make phone calls. According to a study by Nielsen Mobile, “Teenagers ages 13 to 17 are by far the most prolific texters, sending or receiving 1,742 messages a month.” Mr. Williams, a high school statistics teacher, was skeptical about the claims in the article. So he collected data from his first-period statistics class on the number of text messages and calls they had sent or received in the past 24 hours. Here are the texting data:

(a) Make a boxplot of these data by hand. Be sure to check for outliers.

(b) Do these data support the claim in the article about the number of texts sent by teens? Justify your answer with appropriate evidence.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Part (b) No

Part (a)

Step by step solution

01

Part (a) Step 1: Given information

Given data :

071292585125989026
81187209252143344542
02

Part (a) Step 2: Concept

A boxplot is a frequent data analysis graph.

03

Part (a) Step 3: Calculation

The following is a box plot of data from first-period statistics class on the number of text messages and phone calls they sent or received in the previous 24 hours:

To look for outliers, we'll first calculate the IQR and then determine the upper and lower limits: IQR=Q3Q1=433=40IQRx1.5=40x1.5=60Q3+60=43+60=103Q160=360=57

An outlier is a figure that is greater than 103 but less than -57, in this example 118 Thus, a box plot is made for the given data.

04

Part (b) Step 1: Calculation

Within 24 hours, four of the 25students in the data set sent at least 58 texts. The data contradicts the conclusions, as the majority of teenagers send an average of 9 texts each day, resulting in 9x30=270 texts per month, which is far less than the findings.

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