Warning: foreach() argument must be of type array|object, bool given in /var/www/html/web/app/themes/studypress-core-theme/template-parts/header/mobile-offcanvas.php on line 20

Question: Eye shadow, mascara, and nickel allergies. Refer to the Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (June 2010) study of the link between nickel allergies and use of mascara or eye shadow, Exercise 6.58 (p. 358). Recall that two groups of women were a sampled-one group with cosmetic dermatitis from using eye shadow and another group with cosmetic dermatitis from using mascara. In either group, how many women would need to be sampled in order to yield an estimate of the population percentage with a nickel allergy that falls no more than 3% from the true value?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The number of 384 women would need to be sampled in orderto yield an estimate of the population percentage with a nickel allergy that falls no more than 3% from the true value.

Step by step solution

01

Given Information

From Exercise 6.58,

The number of women in the first sample=131.

The number of women in the second sample=250.

The number of women diagnosed with a nickel allergy while using the eye shadow in the first sample=12.

The number of women diagnosed with a nickel allergy while using the mascara in the second sample=25.

02

Compute the sample fraction of success.

The sample fraction of success for the first group with cosmetic dermatitis from using eye shadow is,

p^=12131=0.090.1

The sample fraction of success for the second group with cosmetic dermatitis from using mascara is,

p^=25250=0.1

03

Compute the value. 

Let the confidence level be 0.95.

For1-α=0.95α=0.05α2=0.025

TheZα2corresponding to the standard normal table is,

Zα2=Z0.025=1.96

04

State the formula used to obtain the sample size.

The formula for sample size is given below:

n=Zα22pqSE2

Where SE is the sampling error.

The value of the pq is unknown; it can be estimated by using the sample fraction of success, from a prior sample

05

Compute the sample size

Let the sample proportion p^of both groups be near 0.1.

Here, the value pq is unknown. Which can be obtained by using the sample fraction of successp^

The product of pq is computed as:

pq=p1-p=0.11-0.1=0.10.9=0.09

The sampling error is 3%.

i.eSE=3100=0.03

The sample size is computed as

n=1.9620.10.90.032=0.34570.0009=384.11384
,.Hence, the number of 384 women would need to be sampled in orderto yield an estimate of the population percentage with a nickel allergy that falls no more than 3% from the true value.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Aluminium cans contaminated by fire. A gigantic warehouselocated in Tampa, Florida, stores approximately 60million empty aluminium beer and soda cans. Recently, a fireoccurred at the warehouse. The smoke from the fire contaminatedmany of the cans with blackspot, rendering them unusable.

A University of South Florida statistician was hiredby the insurance company to estimate p,the true proportionof cans in the warehouse that were contaminated by the fire. How many aluminium cans should be randomly sampled toestimate pto within .02 with 90% confidence?

Jitter in a water power system. Jitter is a term used to describe the variation in conduction time of a water power system. Low throughput jitter is critical to successful waterline technology. An investigation of throughput jitter in the opening switch of a prototype system (Journal of Applied Physics) yielded the following descriptive statistics on conduction time for n = 18 trials:x=334.8 nanoseconds, s = 6.3 nanoseconds. (Conduction time is defined as the length of time required for the downstream current to equal 10% of the upstream current.)

a. Construct a 95% confidence interval for the true standard deviation of conduction times of the prototype system.

b. Practically interpret the confidence interval, part a.

c. A system is considered to have low throughput jitter if the true conduction time standard deviation is less than 7 nanoseconds. Does the prototype system satisfy this requirement? Explain.

Corporate sustainability of CPA firms. Refer to the Business and Society (March 2011) study on the sustainability behaviors of CPA corporations, Exercise 6.12 (p. 339). Recall that the level of support for corporate sustainability (measured on a quantitative scale ranging from 0 to 160 points) was obtained for each in a sample of 992 senior managers at CPA firms. The accompanying Minitab printout gives 90% confidence intervals for both the variance and standard deviation of level of support for all senior managers at CPA firms.

a. Locate the 90% confidence interval for σ2on the printout. Interpret the result. b. Use the sample variance on the printout to calculate the 90% confidence interval forσ2. Does your result agree with the interval shown on the printout?

c. Locate the 90% confidence interval for on the printout.

d. Use the result, part a, to calculate the 90% confidence interval forσ. Does your result agree with the interval shown on the printout?

e. Give a practical interpretation of the 90% confidence interval for.σ

f. What assumption about the distribution of level of support is required for the inference, part e, to be valid? Is this assumption reasonably satisfied? (Use your answer to Exercise 4.125, p. 270.)

Preventing the production of defective items. It costs more toproduce defective items—because they must be scrappedor reworked—than it does to produce non-defective items.This simple fact suggests that manufacturers shouldensurethe quality of their products by perfecting theirproduction processes rather than through inspection of finishedproducts (Out of the Crisis,Deming, 1986). In orderto better understand a particular metal-stamping process, the manufacturer wishes to estimate the mean length of itemsproduced by the process during the past 24 hours.

a. How many parts should be sampled in order to estimatethe population means to within .1 millimetre (mm)with 90% confidence? Previous studies of this machinehave indicated that the standard deviation of lengthsproduced by the stamping operation is about 2 mm.

b. Time permits the use of a sample size no larger than100. If a 90% confidence interval for is constructedusing n= 100, will it be wider or narrower than wouldhave been obtained using the sample size determined in

part a? Explain.

c. If management requires that μbe estimated to within.1 mm and that a sample size of no more than 100 beused, what is (approximately) the maximum confidencelevel that could be attained for a confidence interval

Does that meet management's specifications?

Who prepares your tax return? Refer to the Behavioral Research and Accounting (January 2015) study on income tax compliance, Exercise 5.50 (p. 321). Recall that in a sample of 270 U.S. adult workers, the researchers found that 37% prepare their own tax return.

a. Construct a 99% confidence interval for the true proportion of all U.S. adult workers who prepare their own tax return.

b. Suppose an IRS tax consultant claims that 50% of all U.S. adult workers prepare their own tax return. Make an inference about this claim.

c. According to the researchers, about 70% of the sampled workers were recruited from a shopping mall (where they were reimbursed $5 for their time) and about 30% were full-time workers enrolled in a professional graduate degree program. How might this information impact the inference you made in part b?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Math Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free