The following hypotheses are given A random sample of five o
The following hypotheses are given.
A random sample of five observations from the first population resulted in a standard
 deviation of 12. A random sample of seven observations from the second population
 showed a standard deviation of 7. At the .01 significance level, is there more variation in
 the first population?
Solution
As we can see, this is a    right   tailed test.      
               
 Thus, getting the critical chi^2, as alpha =    0.01   ,      
 alpha =    0.01          
 df1 = n1 - 1 =    4         
 df2 = n2 - 1 =    6          
 F (crit) =    9.14830103         
               
 Getting the test statistic, as              
 s1 =    12          
 s2 =    7          
               
 Thus, F = s1^2/s2^2 =    2.93877551          
               
 As F < Fcrit, then we fail to reject the null hypothesis.
Thus, there is no significant evidence that there is more variation in the first population. [CONCLUSION]

