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| Question 1193737:  In a study of speed dating, male subjects were asked to rate the attractiveness of their female dates, and a sample of the results is listed below (1=not attractive; 10=extremely attractive). Construct a confidence interval using a 99% confidence level. What do the results tell about the mean attractiveness ratings of the population of all adult females?
 8, 7, 2, 8, 6, 6, 7, 8, 7, 9, 3, 8
 Answer by math_tutor2020(3817)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! There are n = 12 items in this sample.
 
 Use your calculator to compute the mean and sample standard deviation of the given data values
 xbar = 6.58333 = sample mean
 s = 2.10878 = sample standard deviation
 both of which are approximate
 
 Use a table like this one
 https://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/gerstman/StatPrimer/t-table.pdf
 to look at the bottom row marked in blue (it starts with Z)
 The value 2.576 is just above the 99% confidence level.
 
 The z critical value is roughly z = 2.576 when we have 99% confidence level.
 
 E = margin of error
 E = z*s/sqrt(n)
 E = 2.576*2.10878/sqrt(12)
 E = 1.56815
 which is approximate.
 
 L = lower bound of the confidence interval
 L = xbar - E
 L = 6.58333 - 1.56815
 L = 5.01518
 L = 5.02
 
 U = upper bound of the confidence interval
 U = xbar + E
 U = 6.58333 + 1.56815
 U = 8.15148
 U = 8.15
 
 The 99% confidence interval is approximately (5.02, 8.15) when presented in the template of (L, U)
 
 This is equivalent to 5.02 < mu < 8.15 when written in the form L < mu < U
 We're 99% confident the true population mean attractiveness rating is somewhere between a rating of 5.02 and 8.15
 
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