In: Math
Real Fruit Juice (Raw Data, Software
Required):
A 32 ounce can of a popular fruit drink claims to contain 20%
real fruit juice. Since this is a 32 ounce can, they are
actually claiming that the can contains 6.4 ounces of real
fruit juice. The consumer protection agency samples 30 such
cans of this fruit drink. The amount of real fruit juice in each
can is given in the table below. Test the claim that the mean
amount of real fruit juice in all 32 ounce cans is 6.4 ounces. Test
this claim at the 0.10 significance level.
(a) What type of test is this? This is a left-tailed test. This is a two-tailed test. This is a right-tailed test. (b) What is the test statistic? Round your answer to 2 decimal places. t x =(c) Use software to get the P-value of the test statistic. Round to 4 decimal places. P-value = (d) What is the conclusion regarding the null hypothesis? reject H0 fail to reject H0 (e) Choose the appropriate concluding statement. There is enough data to justify rejection of the claim that the mean amount of real fruit juice in all 32 ounce cans is 6.4 ounces. There is not enough data to justify rejection of the claim that the mean amount of real fruit juice in all 32 ounce cans is 6.4 ounces. We have proven that the mean amount of real fruit juice in all 32 ounce cans is 6.4 ounces. We have proven that the mean amount of real fruit juice in all 32 ounce cans is not 6.4 ounces. |
DATA ( n = 30 ) Real Juice
|