A sample of 160 people has a mean age of 27 with a population standard deviation of 5. Test the hypothesis that the population mean is 26.7 at =0.05
The following null and alternative hypotheses need to be tested:
"H_0:\\mu=26.7"
"H_1:\\mu\\not=26.7"
This corresponds to a two-tailed test, for which a z-test for one mean, with known population standard deviation will be used.
Based on the information provided, the significance level is "\\alpha = 0.05," and the critical value for a two-tailed test is "z_c =1.96."
The rejection region for this two-tailed test is "R = \\{z:|z|> 1.96\\}."
The z-statistic is computed as follows:
6. Since it is observed that "|z|=0.759<1.96=z_c," it is then concluded that the null hypothesis is not rejected.
Using the P-value approach:
The p-value for two-tailed is "p=2P(Z>0.759)=0.447853," and since "p=0.447853>0.05=\\alpha," it is concluded that the null hypothesis is not rejected.
Therefore, there is not enough evidence to claim that the population mean "\\mu"
is different than 26.7, at the "\\alpha = 0.05" significance level.
Comments
Leave a comment