question archive Let x represent the dollar amount spent on supermarket   impulse buying in a 10-minute (unplanned) shopping interval

Let x represent the dollar amount spent on supermarket   impulse buying in a 10-minute (unplanned) shopping interval

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Let x represent the dollar amount spent on supermarket   impulse buying in a 10-minute (unplanned) shopping interval. Based on a   newspaper article, the mean of the x distribution is about $46 and the   estimated standard deviation is about $7.   A button hyperlink   to the SALT program that reads: Use SALT.  

 (a)   Consider a random   sample of n = 80 customers, each of whom has 10 minutes of unplanned shopping   time in a supermarket. From the central limit theorem, what can you say about   the probability distribution of x, the average amount spent by these   customers due to impulse buying? What are the mean and standard deviation of   the x distribution?   The sampling   distribution of x is approximately normal with mean ????x = 46 and   standard error ????x = $0.09.   The sampling   distribution of x is approximately normal with mean ????x = 46 and   standard error ????x = $0.78.   The sampling   distribution of x is not normal.   The sampling   distribution of x is approximately normal with mean ????x = 46 and   standard error ????x = $7.   Is it necessary to   make any assumption about the x distribution? Explain your answer.   It is not necessary   to make any assumption about the x distribution because n is large.   It is not necessary   to make any assumption about the x distribution because ???? is large.   It is necessary to   assume that x has a large distribution.   It is necessary to   assume that x has an approximately normal distribution. 

 

  (b)   What is the   probability that x is between $44 and $48? (Round your answer to four decimal   places.)  

 

 (c)   Let us assume that   x has a distribution that is approximately normal. What is the probability   that x is between $44 and $48? (Round your answer to four decimal places.)   (d)   In part (b), we   used x, the average amount spent, computed for 80 customers. In part (c), we   used x, the amount spent by only one customer. 

 

The answers to parts (b) and   (c) are very different. Why would this happen?   The standard   deviation is larger for the x distribution than it is for the x distribution.   The mean is larger   for the x distribution than it is for the x distribution.   The sample size is   smaller for the x distribution than it is for the x distribution.   The standard   deviation is smaller for the x distribution than it is for the x   distribution.   The x distribution   is approximately normal while the x distribution is not normal.   In this example, x   is a much more predictable or reliable statistic than x. Consider that almost   all marketing strategies and sales pitches are designed for the average   customer and not the individual customer. How does the central limit theorem   tell us that the average customer is much more predictable than the   individual customer?   The central limit   theorem tells us that the standard deviation of the sample mean is much   smaller than the population standard deviation. Thus, the average customer is   more predictable than the individual customer.   The central limit   theorem tells us that small sample sizes have small standard deviations on   average. Thus, the average customer is more predictable than the individual   customer.    

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