In: Statistics and Probability
The accuracy of a census report on a city in southern California was questioned by some government officials. A random sample of 1215 people living in the city was used to check the report, and the results are shown below.
Ethnic OriginCensus PercentSample
ResultBlack10% 125 Asian3% 43 Anglo38% 471 Latino/Latina41% 510 Native
American6% 56 All
others2% 10
Using a 1% level of significance, test the claim that the census
distribution and the sample distribution agree.
(a) What is the level of significance?
State the null and alternate hypotheses.
H0: The distributions are
different.
H1: The distributions are
different.H0: The distributions are the
same.
H1: The distributions are the
same. H0: The
distributions are different.
H1: The distributions are the
same.H0: The distributions are the same.
H1: The distributions are different.
(b) Find the value of the chi-square statistic for the
sample. (Round the expected frequencies to at least three decimal
places. Round the test statistic to three decimal
places.)
Are all the expected frequencies greater than 5?
YesNo
What sampling distribution will you use?
chi-squareuniform Student's
tbinomialnormal
What are the degrees of freedom?
(c) Estimate the P-value of the sample test statistic.
P-value > 0.1000.050 < P-value
< 0.100 0.025 < P-value <
0.0500.010 < P-value < 0.0250.005 < P-value
< 0.010P-value < 0.005
(d) Based on your answers in parts (a) to (c), will you reject or fail to reject the null hypothesis that the population fits the specified distribution of categories?
Since the P-value > α, we fail to reject the
null hypothesis.Since the P-value > α, we reject the null
hypothesis. Since the P-value ≤ α, we
reject the null hypothesis.Since the P-value ≤ α, we fail to
reject the null hypothesis.
(e) Interpret your conclusion in the context of the application.
At the 1% level of significance, the evidence is sufficient to conclude that census distribution and the ethnic origin distribution of city residents are different.At the 1% level of significance, the evidence is insufficient to conclude that census distribution and the ethnic origin distribution of city residents are different.