1The number of accidents per week at a hazardous intersectio
1.The number of accidents per week at a hazardous intersection varies with mean 2.2 and standard deviation 1.4. This distribution takes only whole-number values, so it is certainly not Normal. Let x¯ be the mean number of accidents per week at the intersection during a year (52 weeks). Consider the 52 weeks to be a random sample of weeks. What is the mean of the sampling distribution of x¯?
2.Referring to question 1, what is the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of x¯?
3.Referring to question 1, why is the shape of the sampling distrbution of x¯ approximately Normal?
4.Referring to question 1, what is the approximate probability that x¯ is less than 2?
Solution
1.
By central limit theorem, the mean of the sampling distirbution is the population mean,
u(X) = 2.2 [ANSWER]
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2.
By central limit theorem, the standard deviation of the sampling distribution is given by
sigma(X) = sigma/sqrt(n) = 1.4/sqrt(52) = 0.194145069 [ANSWER]
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3.
Because of the central limit theorem.
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4.
We first get the z score for the critical value. As z = (x - u) sqrt(n) / s, then as          
           
 x = critical value =    2      
 u = mean =    2.2      
 n = sample size =    52      
 s = standard deviation =    1.4      
           
 Thus,          
           
 z = (x - u) * sqrt(n) / s =    -1.030157507      
           
 Thus, using a table/technology, the left tailed area of this is          
           
 P(z <   -1.030157507   ) =    0.151468037 [ANSWER]

