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| Question 1192817:  A researcher wishes to estimate, with 90% confidence, the proportion of adults who have high speed internet access. Her estimate must be accurate within 8% of the true proportion. Find the minimum sample size needed, using a prior study that found that 67% of the respondents said they have high speed internet access.
 Answer by math_tutor2020(3817)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! At 90% confidence, the z critical value is roughly z = 1.645
 Use a Z table to determine this.
 Notice that P(-1.645 < Z < 1.645) = 0.90 approximately.
 
 The prior study says phat = 0.67 is the proportion of people who have high speed internet access (i.e. the 67%)
 E = 0.08 due to the desired 8% error. The researcher wants to achieve this error or smaller.
 
 The min sample size needed is...
 n = phat*(1-phat)*(z/E)^2
 n = 0.67*(1-0.67)*(1.645/0.08)^2
 n = 93.4847  approximately
 n = 94  always round UP to the nearest whole number
 
 Let's say we didn't round up and instead went with n = 93 (it's tempting because 93.4847 is closer to 93 than it is to 94)
 The margin of error would be roughly
 E = z*sqrt(phat*(1-phat)/n)
 E = 1.645*sqrt(0.67*(1-0.67)/93)
 E = 0.0802
 We get an error larger than 8% which isn't what your teacher wants.
 
 However, if we go with n = 94, then,
 E = z*sqrt(phat*(1-phat)/n)
 E = 1.645*sqrt(0.67*(1-0.67)/94)
 E = 0.0798
 Now the error is under 8%
 Likely we won't land *exactly* on 8%, so the next best thing is to get under that value.
 The larger n gets, the smaller E will get, and vice versa.
 
 This is why we always round up for minimum sample size problems.
 
 Answer: 94
 
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