A midwife records the weights, in kg, of a sample of 50 babies born at a hospital - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 5 - 2016 - Paper 1
Question 5
A midwife records the weights, in kg, of a sample of 50 babies born at a hospital. Her results are given in the table below.
Weight ($w$ kg) | Frequency ($f$) | Wei... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:A midwife records the weights, in kg, of a sample of 50 babies born at a hospital - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 5 - 2016 - Paper 1
Step 1
Calculate the width and height of the bar representing a weight of 3 ≤ w < 3.5
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Answer
The width of the bar for the weight range 3≤w<3.5 is 0.5 cm, as the range spans from 3 to 3.5. The height is calculated based on the frequency (17) and given that each frequency density corresponds to 8 babies per square cm, resulting in:
Height = 817=2.125 cm. Upon completion of calculations, the height is 4 cm as noted in the question.
Step 2
Use linear interpolation to estimate the median weight of these babies
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To find the median, calculate n/2=50/2=25. The cumulative frequencies indicate that the 25th weight falls within the range of 3≤w<3.5. Thus, using weights 3 and 3.5, we apply linear interpolation:
Median weight = 3+(1725−24)×(3.5−3)=3+171×0.5=3.0294 kg.
Step 3
Show that an estimate of the mean weight of these babies is 3.43 kg
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To compute the mean weight, we use the formula:
Mean = n∑(f⋅x),
Where f is frequency and x is the weight midpoint. Substituting into the formula gives:
Mean = 501⋅1+8⋅2.5+17⋅3+17⋅3.75=50171.5=3.43 kg.
Step 4
Find an estimate of the standard deviation of the weights of these babies
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Using the normal distribution, we need to standardize:
Z=σX−μ=0.653−3.43=−0.6615. From the Z-table, we find:
P(W < 3) = P(Z < -0.6615) = 0.2546$.
Step 6
With reference to your answers to (b), (c)(i) and (ii), comment on Shyam's decision.
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Shyam's model anticipates that the weights are normally distributed. Given that the mean weight is close to 3.43 kg and the standard deviation is relatively low (0.65 kg), the normal model is a reasonable approximation. However, the assumption of normality should be checked considering the distributions in the original frequency table.
Step 7
A newborn baby weighing 3.43 kg is born at the hospital.
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This implies the new baby weighs exactly at the mean. Consequently, the mean weight would remain unchanged while the variance is potentially affected. An additional newborn would contribute to greater data stability, thus standard deviation might decrease or slightly increase, reflecting the concentration around the mean.