In: Statistics and Probability
Both Questions 4 and 5 are related to the following narrative. For the purposes of these questions, treat the sample as if it were a simple random sample.
The New York Times/Kaiser Family Foundation survey of Chicago is based on interviews conducted April 21 through May 3 with 1,123 adults who live in Chicago. The sample of telephone exchanges called, both landline and cellphone, was randomly selected by a computer from a complete list of exchanges in Chicago, maintained by Marketing Systems Group of Horsham, Pa. Within each exchange, random digits were added to form a complete telephone number, thus permitting access to listed and unlisted numbers alike. Within each landline household, one adult was designated by a random procedure to be the respondent for the survey. Interviewers made multiple attempts to reach every phone number in the survey, calling back unanswered numbers on different days at different times of both day and evening. In addition to sampling error, the practical difficulties of conducting any survey of the public may introduce other sources of error. Variation in the wording, order and translation of questions, for example, may lead to somewhat different results. In the survey, 62% of residents said they disapproved of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s job performance.
Question 4
Question 5
Note : allowed to solve only one question
Question 4
Construct a 95% confidence interval for the true population
proportion of Chicago residents who disapproved of the mayor’s job
performance at that time. To the nearest percentage point, what is
the margin of error? Write a single sentence interpretation of this
confidence interval in your own words.
Now construct a 99% confidence interval for the above scenario.
Indicate the difference(s) that you see between the confidence
interval you calculated in Part (A) and this one. Then write a
single sentence that discusses the implicationsof those
differences.
As the confidence level increases, the width of the confidence interval also increases.