It is advertised that the average braking distance for a small car traveling at 70 miles per hour equals 120 feet. A transportation researcher wants to determine if the statement made in the advertisement is false. She randomly test drives 38 small cars at 70 miles per hour and records the braking distance. The sample average braking distance is computed as 112 feet. Assume that the population standard deviation is 25 feet. (You may find it useful to reference the appropriate table: z table or t table)
a. State the null and the alternative hypotheses for the test. H0: μ = 120; HA: μ ≠ 120 H0: μ ≥ 120; HA: μ < 120 H0: μ ≤ 120; HA: μ > 120
b. Calculate the value of the test statistic and the p-value. (Negative value should be indicated by a minus sign. Round intermediate calculations to at least 4 decimal places and final answer to 2 decimal places.)
Find the p-value. 0.05 p-value < 0.10 p-value 0.10 p-value < 0.01 0.01 p-value < 0.025 0.025 p-value < 0.05
c. Use α = 0.01 to determine if the average breaking distance differs from 120 feet.
a)
H0: = 120 , Ha: 120
b)
test statistics
Z = - / / sqrt(n)
= 112 - 120 / 25 / sqrt(38)
= -1.97
This is test statistics value.
p-value = 2 * P( Z < z)
=2 * P( Z < -1.97)
= 2 * 0.0244
= 0.0488
0.025 < p-value < 0.05
c)
Since p-value > 0.01 , do not reject H0.
We conclude at 0.01 level that, we fail to support the claim.
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