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Topics: Descriptive Statistics and Probability: Name of Company Measure X

The document discusses several topics in descriptive statistics and probability: 1) A dataset on company measures is given and outliers are identified to calculate the mean, standard deviation, and variance. 2) Questions about the interquartile range, skewness, and effect of a data change are answered based on a box plot of the data. 3) Questions about the mode, skewness, and how histograms and box plots complement each other are answered based on a histogram of some data. 4) A probability question is asked about the likelihood of misdirected phone calls. 5) Probability questions are asked about the expected and long-term outcomes of a business venture with a given probability distribution of returns.

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shwetha k
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views

Topics: Descriptive Statistics and Probability: Name of Company Measure X

The document discusses several topics in descriptive statistics and probability: 1) A dataset on company measures is given and outliers are identified to calculate the mean, standard deviation, and variance. 2) Questions about the interquartile range, skewness, and effect of a data change are answered based on a box plot of the data. 3) Questions about the mode, skewness, and how histograms and box plots complement each other are answered based on a histogram of some data. 4) A probability question is asked about the likelihood of misdirected phone calls. 5) Probability questions are asked about the expected and long-term outcomes of a business venture with a given probability distribution of returns.

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shwetha k
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Topics: Descriptive Statistics and Probability

1. Look at the data given below. Plot the data, find the outliers and find out μ , σ , σ 2

Name of company Measure X


Allied Signal 24.23%
Bankers Trust 25.53%
General Mills 25.41%
ITT Industries 24.14%
J.P.Morgan & Co. 29.62%
Lehman Brothers 28.25%
Marriott 25.81%
MCI 24.39%
Merrill Lynch 40.26%
Microsoft 32.95%
Morgan Stanley 91.36%
Sun Microsystems 25.99%
Travelers 39.42%
US Airways 26.71%
Warner-Lambert 35.00%

2.

Questions referred to from Aczel A., Sounderpandian J., Complete Business Statistics (7ed.)
Answer the following three questions based on the box-plot above.
(i) What is inter-quartile range of this dataset? (please approximate the numbers) In one
line, explain what this value implies.
(ii) What can we say about the skewness of this dataset?
(iii) If it was found that the data point with the value 25 is actually 2.5, how would the new
box-plot be affected?

3.

Answer the following three questions based on the histogram above.

Questions referred to from Aczel A., Sounderpandian J., Complete Business Statistics (7ed.)
(i) Where would the mode of this dataset lie?
(ii) Comment on the skewness of the dataset.
(iii) Suppose that the above histogram and the box-plot in question 2 are plotted for the
same dataset. Explain how these graphs complement each other in providing
information about any dataset.

4. AT&T was running commercials in 1990 aimed at luring back customers who had switched to
one of the other long-distance phone service providers. One such commercial shows a
businessman trying to reach Phoenix and mistakenly getting Fiji, where a half-naked native on a
beach responds incomprehensibly in Polynesian. When asked about this advertisement, AT&T
admitted that the portrayed incident did not actually take place but added that this was an
enactment of something that “could happen.” Suppose that one in 200 long-distance telephone
calls is misdirected. What is the probability that at least one in five attempted telephone calls
reaches the wrong number? (Assume independence of attempts.)

5. Returns on a certain business venture, to the nearest $1,000, are known to follow the following
probability distribution
x P(x)
-2,000 0.1
-1,000 0.1
0 0.2
1000 0.2
2000 0.3
3000 0.1

(i) What is the most likely monetary outcome of the business venture?
(ii) Is the venture likely to be successful? Explain
(iii) What is the long-term average earning of business ventures of this kind? Explain
(iv) What is the good measure of the risk involved in a venture of this kind? Compute this
measure

Questions referred to from Aczel A., Sounderpandian J., Complete Business Statistics (7ed.)

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