Business Research Methods Part 1 Babatunde Adeyemi‚ Machele Bardge‚ Yolanda Colzie‚ and Yolanda Le’Noir QNT/561 Applied Business Research and Statistics Dr. Nelva Lee August 8‚ 2012 Business Research Methods Part 1 In week two‚ the objectives were identifying and analyzing a research question that applies to a chosen organization‚ choosing an organization with familiarity‚ developing a research question arising from an organizational dilemma‚ while determining a research
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Subject CT3 Probability and Mathematical Statistics Core Technical Syllabus for the 2014 exams 1 June 2013 Subject CT3 – Probability and Mathematical Statistics Core Technical Aim The aim of the Probability and Mathematical Statistics subject is to provide a grounding in the aspects of statistics and in particular statistical modelling that are of relevance to actuarial work. Links to other subjects Subjects CT4 – Models and CT6 – Statistical Methods: use the statistical concepts
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or statement is true or false. __F__ 1. Two events that are independent cannot be mutually exclusive. __F__ 2. A joint probability can have a value greater than 1. __F__ 3. The intersection of A and Ac is the entire sample space. __T__ 4. If 50 of 250 people contacted make a donation to the city symphony‚ then the relative frequency method assigns a probability of .2 to the outcome of making a donation. __T__ 5. An automobile dealership is waiting to take delivery of nine new cars
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EXERCISES (Discrete Probability Distribution) EXERCISES (Discrete Probability Distribution) P X x n C x p 1 p x BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION n x P X x n C x p 1 p x BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION n x 1. 2. 3. The probability that a certain kind of component will survive a given shock test is ¾. Find the probability that exactly 2 of the next 4 components tested survive. The probability that a log-on to the network is successful is 0.87. Ten users
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Homework 3 Probability 1. As part of a Pick Your Prize promotion‚ a store invited customers to choose which of three prizes they’d like to win. They also kept track of respondents’ gender. The following contingency table shows the results: | MP3 Player | Camera | Bike | Total | Men | 62 | 117 | 60 | 239 | Woman | 101 | 130 | 30 | 261 | Total | 163 | 247 | 90 | 500 | What is the probability that: a. a randomly selected customer would pick the camera? 247/500= 0.494=
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NAME: SHU ZHAOHUI ID: 17329164 Q5. Descriptive Statistics | | N | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | Std. Deviation | Skewness | | Statistic | Statistic | Statistic | Statistic | Statistic | Statistic | Std. Error | Gasolinescore | 1000 | 3.00 | 21.00 | 14.9090 | 4.83654 | -.493 | .077 | Globalscore | 1000 | 3.00 | 21.00 | 17.0490 | 3.78774 | -1.073 | .077 | Valid N (listwise) | 1000 | | | | | | | The mean in the gaslinescore and globalscore stand for the average the respondents choose is
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------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- Research Paper ------------------------------------------------- THE PROBABILITY OF FINANCIAL CRISIS IN THE USA IN 2012-2013 ------------------------------------------------- Ilias Habbasov ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- BBA course submitted to Elżbieta Jendrych‚ PhD on 3 December 2012 Winter Semester 2012/2013
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t) P (X > s + t) P (X > t) e−λ(s+t) e−λt e−λs P (X > s) – Example: Suppose that the amount of time one spends in a bank is exponentially distributed with mean 10 minutes‚ λ = 1/10. What is the probability that a customer will spend more than 15 minutes in the bank? What is the probability that a customer will spend more than 15 minutes in the bank given that he is still in the bank after 10 minutes? Solution: P (X > 15) = e−15λ = e−3/2 = 0.22 P (X > 15|X > 10) = P (X > 5) = e−1/2 =
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PROBABILITY QUESTIONS Q1). You draw a card at random from a standard deck of 52 cards. Neither you nor anyone else looked at the card you picked. You keep it face down. Your friend then picks a card at random from a remaining 51 cards. a) What is the probability that your card is ace of spades? 1/52 b) What is the probability that your friend’s card is ace of spades? (Hint: Construct the sample space for what your friend’s card can be.) 1/51 c) You turn over your card and it is 10 of
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True/False Questions 1. The standard deviation of any normal random variable is always equal to one. Answer: False Type: Concept Difficulty: Easy 2. For any normal random variable‚ the probability that the random variable will equal one is always zero. Answer: True Type: Concept Difficulty: Medium 3. The graph of a standard normal random variable is always symmetric. Answer: True Type: Concept Difficulty: Easy 4. The formula will convert any normal
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