1. Many Alpine ski centers base their calculations of revenues and profits on the belief that the average skier ski’s four times a year with a population standard deviation of 2. To investigate this belief a random sample of 63 skiers was drawn and each participant was asked to report the number of times they skied last year. This yielded a mean of 4.84. Can we infer at the 10% significance level that the assumption of ski centers is wrong?

Respuesta :

Answer:

We cannot infer at the 10% significance level that the assumption of ski centers is wrong

Step-by-step explanation:

The null hypothesis for this question can be stated as  

Null hypothesis H0:  =4  

Alternate hypothesis Ha:  

The test is two tailed

Standard Deviation –  

 = 2

z=(4.84-4)/(2/sqrt(63))

=3.33

Z(0.1/2)=1.645 is less than Z =3.334

Hence, we will reject H0  

Hence, the average growth skier ski’s four times a year is not true