Question
Did you ever purchase a bag of M&M's candies and wonder about the distribution of colors? Did you know in the beginning they were all
Did you ever purchase a bag of M&M's candies and wonder about the distribution of colors? Did you know in the beginning they were all brown? Now, peanut M&M's are 12% brown, 15% yellow, 12% red, 23% blue, 23% orange, and 15% green. A 6-oz. bag purchased at the Book Store at Coastal Carolina University had 14 brown, 13 yellow, 14 red, 12 blue, 7 orange, and 12 green. Is it reasonable to conclude that the actual distribution agrees with the expected distribution? Use the .05 significance level.
c. Complete the following table. (Round fe to 1 decimal place. Round (fo - fe)2/fe to 3 decimal places. Leave no cells blank - be certain to enter "0" wherever required. Negative amounts should be indicated by a minus sign. Round 2 to 3 decimal places.)