Question
Scenario #1 Please go to the websitehttp://www.ssa.gov/OACT/babynames/ and scroll down to the bottom, items of interest. Enter your birth year and choose top 1000 popularity
Scenario #1
Please go to the websitehttp://www.ssa.gov/OACT/babynames/ and scroll down to the bottom, "items of interest." Enter your birth year and choose top 1000 popularity on the "Population Names by Birth Year" column.
- Guys should check male name column and girls should check female name column. Find out the most popular name and calculate the proportion of it out of total. Conduct 95% confidence interval for the proportion of people sharing that name in your cohort.
- Now, move to the "Popularity of a Name" column. According to the name you chose from A, determine whether there is sufficient evidence to conclude that the name (you chose) is more popular in the year of 2000 (if not working, try 2001, 2002, or 2003, etc.) than it was in your cohort. Use the 5% level of significance. (This question needs all five steps we talked about for hypothesis testing including null/alternate hypothesis)
Note: For this question, use excel for all the numerical work and clearly state your answers.
Scenario #2
Please go to the websitehttps://www.census.gov/data/datasets/2017/demo/popproj/2017-popproj.html and download Table 1. Projected Population by Single Year of Age, Sex, Race, and Hispanic Origin for the United States: 2016 to 2060 in excel file. Among all the data inputs, look only for when all sex, origin, and race are "0." Then, look for data inputs in the column of POP_1 and POP_2.
- Conduct 95% confidence interval for each POP_1 and POP_2 using mean and standard deviation calculated using excel.
- With the data inputs on file, is there a sufficient evidence that the population mean in POP_1 is lower than the one in POP_2 (sex, origin, and race are all "0") with 4% level of significance? (Show all five steps)
- How about POP_3 and POP_4? Is there a sufficient evidence that the population mean in POP3 is greater than the one in POP_4 (sex, origin, and race are all "0") with 5% level of significance? (Show all five steps)
Scenario #3
Please go to the websitehttps://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/temp-and-precip/national-temperature-index/ and check "USHCN" on the datasets from 1895 to 2013. Use those data sets in the excel.
- Conduct 90% confidence interval of temperature in USCRN datasets from 1895 to 2013 time period.
- Now, check "CLIMDIV" on the datasets for the same time period. Conduct 93% confidence interval of temperature in CLIMDIV.
- Now, I am told that the average temperature reported by CLIMDIV is higher than the one reported by USHCN. Do the dataset provide sufficient evidence to support this with 4% level of significance?
Scenario #4
Please go to the websitehttps://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datatools/records and, on the "View Selected Records" tab, set the conditions as "Daily Records" for timescale, "Highest Max Temperature" for parameter, "March 14, 2018" as the Starting Date and "April 12, 2018" as the End Date in the Date Range, "All" for record type, "Country" for location category, and "United States" for country, and then click on "Show Records."
- Find the station name with the median value of the "record." (Look for the "record column")
- Construct 95% confidence interval with the "record."
- How many stations are there outside of the range within 2 standard deviations? If the same station shows more than once, count it as one.
Step by Step Solution
There are 3 Steps involved in it
Step: 1
Get Instant Access to Expert-Tailored Solutions
See step-by-step solutions with expert insights and AI powered tools for academic success
Step: 2
Step: 3
Ace Your Homework with AI
Get the answers you need in no time with our AI-driven, step-by-step assistance
Get Started