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| Question 316002:  Assume the body temperatures of healthy adults are normally distributed with a mean of 98.20 °F and a standard deviation of 0.62 °F (based on data from the University of Maryland researchers).
 
 a.	If you have a body temperature of 99.00 °F, what is your percentile score?
 b.	Convert 99.00 °F to a standard score (or a z-score).
 c.	Is a body temperature of 99.00 °F unusual? Why or why not?
 d.	Fifty adults are randomly selected. What is the likelihood that the mean of their body temperatures is 97.98 °F or lower?
 e.	A person’s body temperature is found to be 101.00 °F. Is the result unusual? Why or why not? What should you conclude?
 
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Assume the body temperatures of healthy adults are normally distributed with a mean of 98.20 °F and a standard deviation of 0.62 °F (based on data from the University of Maryland researchers). a. If you have a body temperature of 99.00 °F, what is your percentile score?
 z(99) = (99-98.2)/0.62 = 1.2903
 P(z < 1.2903) = normalcdf(-100,1.2903) = 0.9015
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 99 degrees is at the 91%ile
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 b. Convert 99.00 °F to a standard score (or a z-score).
 See the problem above.
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 c. Is a body temperature of 99.00 °F unusual? Why or why not?
 Not too unusual.  It is 1.29 standard deviations above the mean.
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 d. Fifty adults are randomly selected. What is the likelihood that the mean of their body temperatures is 97.98 °F or lower?
 z(97.98-98.2)/[0.62/sqrt(50)] = -2.5091
 P(z< -2.5091) = 0.0061
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 e. A person’s body temperature is found to be 101.00 °F. Is the result unusual? Why or why not? What should you conclude?
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 Find the z-value of 101 degrees.
 Based on the z-value decide if the result is "unusual".
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 Cheers,
 Stan H.
 
 
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