Suppose that you can make reasonably good educated guesses, pÌ1g and pÌ2g, for the observed values of

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Suppose that you can make reasonably good educated guesses, p̂1g and p̂2g, for the observed values of p̂1 and p̂2.
a. Use your result from Exercise 12.132 to show that a (1 ˆ’ α)-level confidence interval for the difference between two population proportions that has an approximate margin of error of E can be obtained by choosing
Suppose that you can make reasonably good educated guesses, p̂1g

rounded up to the nearest whole number. Note: If you know likely ranges instead of exact educated guesses for the observed values of the two sample proportions, use the values in the ranges closest to 0.5 as the educated guesses.
b. Explain why the formula in part (a) yields smaller (or at worst the same) sample sizes than the formula in Exercise 12.133.
c. When reasonably good educated guesses for the observed values of p̂1 and p̂2 can be made, explain why choosing the sample sizes by using the formula in part (a) is preferable to choosing them by using the formula in Exercise 12.133.

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Introductory Statistics

ISBN: 9780321989178

10th Edition

Authors: Neil A. Weiss

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