Exam 4: Sample Surveys in the Real World
Exam 1: Where Do Data Come From30 Questions
Exam 2: Samples, Good and Bad30 Questions
Exam 3: What Do Samples Tell Us55 Questions
Exam 4: Sample Surveys in the Real World36 Questions
Exam 5: Experiments, Good and Bad50 Questions
Exam 6: Experiments in the Real World32 Questions
Exam 7: Data Ethics21 Questions
Exam 8: Measuring33 Questions
Exam 9: Do the Numbers Make Sense25 Questions
Exam 10: Graphs, Good and Bad30 Questions
Exam 11: Displaying Distributions With Graphs22 Questions
Exam 13: Normal Distributions54 Questions
Exam 14: Describing Relationships: Scatterplots and Correlation56 Questions
Exam 15: Describing Relationships: Regression, Prediction, and Causation37 Questions
Exam 16: The Consumer Price Index and Government Statistics31 Questions
Exam 17: Thinking About Chance25 Questions
Exam 18: Probability Models30 Questions
Exam 19: Simulation20 Questions
Exam 20: The House Edge: Expected Values30 Questions
Exam 21: What Is a Confidence Interval43 Questions
Exam 22: What Is a Test of Significance30 Questions
Exam 23: Use and Abuse of Statistical Inference18 Questions
Exam 24: Two-Way Tables and the Chi-Square Test47 Questions
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An overnight opinion poll calls randomly selected telephone numbers. This polling method misses all people without a phone. Which of the following types of errors is present in this situation?
(Multiple Choice)
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To obtain faculty opinions on a particular issue, the chief academic officer started with the five schools making up the university. Within each school, she randomly selected two departments. Once the departments were selected, seven faculty members in those departments were selected at random (or all if there were fewer than seven) to be interviewed. This is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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In order to gauge student opinion on his grading procedures, the professor divides the class into two groups: undergraduate students and graduate students. He then takes random samples from each group. This is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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Some common sources of nonsampling error in samples of human populations are
(Multiple Choice)
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To study the security protocols at a major airport, ten passengers were randomly selected from each flight leaving the airport on a particular day and questioned about the security efforts they experienced while at the airport. This is an example of
(Multiple Choice)
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Professor Lilli Gans wishes to study the relationship between a person's zodiac sign and his or her political opinions. She obtains the birthdays of all 816 students enrolled in her Astrology 101 course. Then she uses a random digits table to choose 10 students from each of the twelve zodiac signs. For example, students born from March 21 until April 19 have the Aries zodiac sign, and Professor Gans chooses 10 Aries students at random. She uses a different part of the table of random digits to choose students having each sign. After obtaining her sample, Professor Gans has the selected students fill out a questionnaire.
Professor Gans has obtained a
(Multiple Choice)
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A survey was sent to a simple random sample of college sophomores. The sample size was 200. When asked whether or not they liked Frank Sinatra's music, 40 of these students did not give any answer. This is an example of
(Multiple Choice)
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Concerned about the sanitation training practices of its employees, a major fast-food restaurant chain randomly selected 40 of its restaurants nationwide. All employees at these 40 restaurants were tested for their knowledge of both the restaurant chain and local health code practices. This is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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Some common sources of nonsampling error in samples of human populations are
(Multiple Choice)
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A Gallup Poll contacts people by dialing telephone numbers at random. A possible source of nonsampling error in this poll is that
(Multiple Choice)
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Among the following, which is not a question one needs to ask before believing a poll?
(Multiple Choice)
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One source of error in pre-election polls is that some people in the sample do not tell the truth about who they will vote for. This is an example of
(Multiple Choice)
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A poll about the effects of marijuana legalization questioned 1025 Denver residents and 472 Colorado citizens from outside Denver. The design of the sample chose separate samples from the two groups and planned to interview more Denver residents than other Coloradans. This is a:
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is a source of nonsampling error in a sample survey?
(Multiple Choice)
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