STATS Assignment
Assume you are working at the Consumer Protection Agency. Recently, you have been gettingcomplaints about the highway gas mileage of a new minivan. The car company agrees to allowyou to select randomly 41 of its new minivans to test their highway mileage. The companyclaims that its minivans get 28 miles per gallon on the highway. Your test results show a samplemean of 26.7 and a sample standard deviation of 4.2. Part 1 (Confidence Interval): Calculate a 95% confidence interval around your sample mean. Is the claimed mean inside your confidence interval? What does your result mean, in terms of the company’s claim? Part 2 (Two-tail test): List the null and alternative hypotheses for the appropriate test. Use alpha = 0.05. Find the critical value(s) and calculate the observed value of the teststatistic. Is the observed test statistic in the critical (rejection) region? Will the p-value be higher or lower than your alpha? What does this result mean, in termsof the company’s claim? Part 3 (One-tail test): List the null and alternative hypotheses for the test. Use alpha = 0.05. Find the critical value and calculate the observed value of the test statistic. Is the observed test statistic in the critical region?? Will the p-value be higher or lower than your alpha? What does this result mean, in terms of the company’s claim? Part 4 (Conclusion): What conclusions did you reach? What did you learn from each method of checking the claim for means? Were there important differences between methods? Which method would you prefer? Which carries a higher risk of a type I error? Based on this experience, why do you think itโs important to decide on the method?before conducting the test? Based on your results, do you support the company’s claim? What action, if any, should the company take? Note: The 1- to 2-page requirement does not include the graphs you prepare for this Assignment.Embed the graphs you create in the Word document with your written responses to the questions.Drawings may be hand-drawn and either scanned or photographed, or they may be drawn usingMinitab or other statistical drawing packages.