find a 99% confidence interval given ∑i=161 X_i = 6450 and ∑i=161 X^2_i = 6450












0














find a 99% confidence interval for the mean given:



i=161 X_i = 6450



and



i=161 X^2_i = 6450



I found the sample mean of 105.7377 . (6450/61)



I do not know how to find the variance. Then confidence interval is computable.










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  • We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
    – Shaun
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:16


















0














find a 99% confidence interval for the mean given:



i=161 X_i = 6450



and



i=161 X^2_i = 6450



I found the sample mean of 105.7377 . (6450/61)



I do not know how to find the variance. Then confidence interval is computable.










share|cite|improve this question
























  • We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
    – Shaun
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:16
















0












0








0







find a 99% confidence interval for the mean given:



i=161 X_i = 6450



and



i=161 X^2_i = 6450



I found the sample mean of 105.7377 . (6450/61)



I do not know how to find the variance. Then confidence interval is computable.










share|cite|improve this question















find a 99% confidence interval for the mean given:



i=161 X_i = 6450



and



i=161 X^2_i = 6450



I found the sample mean of 105.7377 . (6450/61)



I do not know how to find the variance. Then confidence interval is computable.







statistics variance confidence-interval






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share|cite|improve this question













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edited Nov 19 '18 at 2:25

























asked Nov 19 '18 at 2:03









kmediate

115




115












  • We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
    – Shaun
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:16




















  • We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
    – Shaun
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:16


















We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
– Shaun
Nov 19 '18 at 2:16






We use a form of $LaTeX$ here called MathJax. It works in the title section too.
– Shaun
Nov 19 '18 at 2:16












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














CI for mean or which? You can use those formulas to find the sample variance too.



$s^{2}= frac{sum_{i=0}^n x^{2}_{i} - (sum_{i=0}^n x_{i})^{2}/n}{n-1} $



If for mean you will use a T-interval



$(bar{x} - t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}},bar{x} + t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}}) $



where df=n-1






share|cite|improve this answer























  • yes, for the mean
    – kmediate
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:25










  • if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
    – pfmr1995
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:28











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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oldest

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active

oldest

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active

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0














CI for mean or which? You can use those formulas to find the sample variance too.



$s^{2}= frac{sum_{i=0}^n x^{2}_{i} - (sum_{i=0}^n x_{i})^{2}/n}{n-1} $



If for mean you will use a T-interval



$(bar{x} - t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}},bar{x} + t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}}) $



where df=n-1






share|cite|improve this answer























  • yes, for the mean
    – kmediate
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:25










  • if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
    – pfmr1995
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:28
















0














CI for mean or which? You can use those formulas to find the sample variance too.



$s^{2}= frac{sum_{i=0}^n x^{2}_{i} - (sum_{i=0}^n x_{i})^{2}/n}{n-1} $



If for mean you will use a T-interval



$(bar{x} - t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}},bar{x} + t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}}) $



where df=n-1






share|cite|improve this answer























  • yes, for the mean
    – kmediate
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:25










  • if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
    – pfmr1995
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:28














0












0








0






CI for mean or which? You can use those formulas to find the sample variance too.



$s^{2}= frac{sum_{i=0}^n x^{2}_{i} - (sum_{i=0}^n x_{i})^{2}/n}{n-1} $



If for mean you will use a T-interval



$(bar{x} - t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}},bar{x} + t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}}) $



where df=n-1






share|cite|improve this answer














CI for mean or which? You can use those formulas to find the sample variance too.



$s^{2}= frac{sum_{i=0}^n x^{2}_{i} - (sum_{i=0}^n x_{i})^{2}/n}{n-1} $



If for mean you will use a T-interval



$(bar{x} - t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}},bar{x} + t_{alpha/2,df}{frac{s}{sqrt{n}}}) $



where df=n-1







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








edited Nov 19 '18 at 2:27

























answered Nov 19 '18 at 2:23









pfmr1995

93




93












  • yes, for the mean
    – kmediate
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:25










  • if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
    – pfmr1995
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:28


















  • yes, for the mean
    – kmediate
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:25










  • if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
    – pfmr1995
    Nov 19 '18 at 2:28
















yes, for the mean
– kmediate
Nov 19 '18 at 2:25




yes, for the mean
– kmediate
Nov 19 '18 at 2:25












if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
– pfmr1995
Nov 19 '18 at 2:28




if you are allowed to use a graphing calculator a ti-84 can do it
– pfmr1995
Nov 19 '18 at 2:28


















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