Values Frequency 0 1 2 3 4 4 21 10 13 2 a) Based on these 50 observations, is a binomial distribution with n=6 and p = 0

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Values Frequency 0 1 2 3 4 4 21 10 13 2 a) Based on these 50 observations, is a binomial distribution with n=6 and p = 0

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Values Frequency 0 1 2 3 4 4 21 10 13 2 A Based On These 50 Observations Is A Binomial Distribution With N 6 And P 0 1
Values Frequency 0 1 2 3 4 4 21 10 13 2 A Based On These 50 Observations Is A Binomial Distribution With N 6 And P 0 1 (57.25 KiB) Viewed 34 times
Values Frequency 0 1 2 3 4 4 21 10 13 2 a) Based on these 50 observations, is a binomial distribution with n=6 and p = 0.25 an appropriate model? Use a = 0.05. As usual, state the null and alternate hypotheses, identify the rejection and FTR regions (as inequalities, on a graph, or both), compute 2 CEE 3770 Spring 2022 the test statistic, report the conclusion of the test, and interpret the conclusion in plain English. (5 points) b) Calculate the p-value for this test (1 point) c) Still assuming that n = 6, use the method of moments to estimate p. That is, use X to estimate E[X], and use that to find an estimator for p. (1 point) d) If we were conducting the statistical test using the estimated p. how - if at all - would the test conducted in part (a) change? (2 points)
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