This hypothesis test is a right-tailed test. Part 2 of 5 Find the critical value(s). Round the answer(s) to three decimal places, if necessary. If there is more than one critical value, separate them...


This hypothesis test is a right-tailed<br>test.<br>Part 2 of 5<br>Find the critical value(s). Round the answer(s) to three decimal places, if necessary. If there is more than one critical value, separate them with commas.<br>Critical value(s): 2.326<br>Part: 2 /5<br>Part 3 of 5<br>Compute the test statistic. Round the answer to two decimal places.<br>Microsoft Outlook<br>DEC<br>W<br>9.<br>

Extracted text: This hypothesis test is a right-tailed test. Part 2 of 5 Find the critical value(s). Round the answer(s) to three decimal places, if necessary. If there is more than one critical value, separate them with commas. Critical value(s): 2.326 Part: 2 /5 Part 3 of 5 Compute the test statistic. Round the answer to two decimal places. Microsoft Outlook DEC W 9.
Hurricane damage: In August and September 2005, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita caused extraordinary flooding in New Orleans, Louisiana. Many homes were<br>severely damaged or destroyed, and of those that survived, many required extensive cleaning. It was thought that cleaning of flood-damaged homes might<br>present a health hazard due to the large amounts of mold present in many of the homes. In a sample of 364 residents of Orleans Parish who had participated in<br>cleaning of one or more homes, 72 had experienced symptoms of wheezing, and in a sample of 184 residents who had not participated in cleaning, 23 reported<br>wheezing symptoms (numbers read from a graph). Can you conclude that the proportion of residents with wheezing symptoms is greater among those who<br>participated in the cleaning of flood-damaged homes? Let p, denote the proportion of residents with wheezing symptoms who had cleaned flood-damaged<br>homes, and let p, be the population proportion with wheezing symptoms who did not participate in the cleaning of flood-damaged homes. Use the a= 0.01 level<br>of significance and the critical value method.<br>Part 1 of 5<br>State the null and alternate hypotheses.<br>H: P1 = P2<br>H: P1> P2<br>This hypothesis test is a<br>-tailed<br>test.<br>Part 2 of 5<br>Find the critical value(s). Round the answer(s) to three decimal places, if necessary. If there is more than one critical value, separate them with commas.<br>Critical value(s): 2.326<br>DEC<br>w<br>6.<br>...<br>...<br>DII<br>

Extracted text: Hurricane damage: In August and September 2005, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita caused extraordinary flooding in New Orleans, Louisiana. Many homes were severely damaged or destroyed, and of those that survived, many required extensive cleaning. It was thought that cleaning of flood-damaged homes might present a health hazard due to the large amounts of mold present in many of the homes. In a sample of 364 residents of Orleans Parish who had participated in cleaning of one or more homes, 72 had experienced symptoms of wheezing, and in a sample of 184 residents who had not participated in cleaning, 23 reported wheezing symptoms (numbers read from a graph). Can you conclude that the proportion of residents with wheezing symptoms is greater among those who participated in the cleaning of flood-damaged homes? Let p, denote the proportion of residents with wheezing symptoms who had cleaned flood-damaged homes, and let p, be the population proportion with wheezing symptoms who did not participate in the cleaning of flood-damaged homes. Use the a= 0.01 level of significance and the critical value method. Part 1 of 5 State the null and alternate hypotheses. H: P1 = P2 H: P1> P2 This hypothesis test is a -tailed test. Part 2 of 5 Find the critical value(s). Round the answer(s) to three decimal places, if necessary. If there is more than one critical value, separate them with commas. Critical value(s): 2.326 DEC w 6. ... ... DII
Jun 08, 2022
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