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10 May, 06:07

A nurse at a local hospital is interested in estimating the birth weight of infants. how large a sample must she select if she desires to be 98% confident that the tue mean is within 3 ounces of sample mean. the standard deviation of birth weights is known to be 6 ounces

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  1. 10 May, 06:28
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    For large sample confidence intervals about the mean you have:

    xBar ± z * sx / sqrt (n)

    where xBar is the sample mean z is the zscore for having α% of the data in the tails, i. e., P (|Z| > z) = α sx is the sample standard deviation n is the sample size

    We need only to concern ourselves with the error term of the CI, In order to find the sample size needed for a confidence interval of a given size.

    z * sx / sqrt (n) = width.

    so the z-score for the confidence interval of. 98 is the value of z such that 0.01 is in each tail of the distribution. z = 2.326348

    The equation we need to solve is:

    z * sx / sqrt (n) = width

    n = (z * sx / width) ^ 2.

    n = (2.326348 * 6 / 3) ^ 2

    n = 21.64758

    Since n must be integer valued we need to take the ceiling of this solution.

    n = 22
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