monsieuruzairo3
Member
Dear David Harper, CFA, FRM, CIPM
I came across the following questions and don't think the answer is correctly calculated
A headset making company claims that the resistance of their new headset is 70 ohms. A dealer wants to test this hypothesis before placing the order. He knows that the higher the resistance, the better it is for him. He takes 36 sample headsets and finds out that sample mean is 73 ohms and it is known that population standard deviation is 1.4%. What are the correct hypothesis test and test statistic he should use?
Choose one answer.
a. Right-tailed z-test and z-statistic = 2.14 Correct
b. Left-tailed t-test and t-stat = 2.14 Incorrect
c. Right-tailed z-test and z-stat=12.9 Incorrect
d. Two-tailed t-test and t-stat = 2.14 Incorrect
The correct answer is A
Sol. The dealer is interested only in finding out whether the resistance is greater or equal to the claimed 70 Ohms. So the lower tail is insignificant and it’s a right tailed test. Sample size is greater than 30 and population standard deviation is known. So Z-test.
Z-stat = ( 73-70 )/1.4 = 2.14
In my opinion, two things are incorrect with the problem
-> Standard deviation is not in Ohms, it's in percentage
-> Even if we take Std. Dev to be 1.4(as they have done in the question), we still need to divide it by Sqrt(36)= 6 (standard error of the sample) as here we are talking about a sample. The answer therefore should be C
What do you think?
Best
Uzi
I came across the following questions and don't think the answer is correctly calculated
A headset making company claims that the resistance of their new headset is 70 ohms. A dealer wants to test this hypothesis before placing the order. He knows that the higher the resistance, the better it is for him. He takes 36 sample headsets and finds out that sample mean is 73 ohms and it is known that population standard deviation is 1.4%. What are the correct hypothesis test and test statistic he should use?
Choose one answer.
a. Right-tailed z-test and z-statistic = 2.14 Correct
b. Left-tailed t-test and t-stat = 2.14 Incorrect
c. Right-tailed z-test and z-stat=12.9 Incorrect
d. Two-tailed t-test and t-stat = 2.14 Incorrect
The correct answer is A
Sol. The dealer is interested only in finding out whether the resistance is greater or equal to the claimed 70 Ohms. So the lower tail is insignificant and it’s a right tailed test. Sample size is greater than 30 and population standard deviation is known. So Z-test.
Z-stat = ( 73-70 )/1.4 = 2.14
In my opinion, two things are incorrect with the problem
-> Standard deviation is not in Ohms, it's in percentage
-> Even if we take Std. Dev to be 1.4(as they have done in the question), we still need to divide it by Sqrt(36)= 6 (standard error of the sample) as here we are talking about a sample. The answer therefore should be C
What do you think?
Best
Uzi