QUESTION IMAGE
Question
below are two representations of data.
a: 2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9
box plot for b with number line 3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11
which statement about a and b is true?
- median of a > median of b
- range of a < range of b
- upper quartile of a < upper quartile of b
- lower quartile of a > lower quartile of b
which statistic can not be determined from a box plot representing the scores on a math test in mrs. deridder’s algebra class?
- the lowest score
- the median score
- the highest score
- the score that occurs most frequently
the dot plot shown below represents the number of pets owned by students in a class.
dot plot with x - axis 0,1,2,3,4,5,6
which statement about the data is not true?
- the median is 3.
- the interquartile range is 2.
- the mean is 3.
- the data contain no outliers.
First Question (About A and B)
Step 1: Analyze Data A
Data A: \(2, 5, 5, 6, 6, 6, 7, 8, 9\) (assuming the first number is 2, maybe a typo like 2 instead of 3? Wait, the box plot for B has a minimum at 3? Wait, let's re - check. Wait, the data A is written as "2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9" (let's count the numbers: 9 numbers). Median of A: for 9 numbers, the median is the 5th term. The 5th term is 6. Range of A: \(9 - 2=7\). Lower quartile (Q1) of A: the first 4 numbers (\(2,5,5,6\)), Q1 is the median of these 4, which is \(\frac{5 + 5}{2}=5\). Upper quartile (Q3) of A: the last 4 numbers (\(6,7,8,9\)), Q3 is \(\frac{7+8}{2}=7.5\).
Step 2: Analyze Data B (Box - plot)
From the box - plot, the minimum (min) is 3, the lower quartile (Q1) is 4, the median (Q2) is 5, the upper quartile (Q3) is 9, and the maximum (max) is 10. Range of B: \(10 - 3 = 7\).
Step 3: Check Each Option
- Median of A: 6, Median of B: 5. So median of A>median of B? Wait, no, 6>5? Wait, but let's re - check. Wait, maybe I misread data A. Wait, the first number in A: if it's a typo and should be 3? Wait, the box - plot for B has min at 3. Wait, the original data A: "2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9" – 9 numbers. Median is the 5th term: 6. Box - plot B: median (line in box) is at 5. So median of A (6)>median of B (5)? But let's check other options.
- Range of A: \(9 - 2 = 7\), Range of B: \(10 - 3=7\). So range of A < range of B is false.
- Upper quartile of A: 7.5, Upper quartile of B: 9. So upper quartile of A < upper quartile of B is true? Wait, no, 7.5 < 9 is true? Wait, but let's check option 4. Lower quartile of A: 5, Lower quartile of B: 4. So lower quartile of A>lower quartile of B (5 > 4) is true? Wait, there is a contradiction here. Wait, maybe I made a mistake in data A. Let's re - count data A: the numbers are 2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9. Number of terms: 9. Q1: for 9 terms, the first quartile is the median of the first 4 terms (positions 1 - 4: 2,5,5,6). Median of these 4: (5 + 5)/2 = 5. Q3: median of last 4 terms (positions 6 - 9: 6,7,8,9). Median of these 4: (7 + 8)/2 = 7.5. Box - plot B: from the plot, the left whisker starts at 3, Q1 is at 4, median at 5, Q3 at 9, right whisker at 10. So:
- Option 1: Median A = 6, Median B = 5. 6>5, so option 1 is true? But let's check option 4: Lower quartile A = 5, Lower quartile B = 4. 5>4, so option 4 is also true? Wait, this can't be. Maybe the data A is written wrong. Wait, the first number in A: maybe it's 3 instead of 2? Let's assume data A is 3,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9. Then number of terms is 9. Median is 6. Range: 9 - 3 = 6. Q1: median of 3,5,5,6: (5 + 5)/2 = 5. Q3: median of 6,7,8,9: (7 + 8)/2 = 7.5. Box - plot B: range 10 - 3 = 7. Then range of A (6) < range of B (7), so option 2 is true. But this is based on a typo. Alternatively, maybe the original data A is 2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9 (9 terms). Then:
- Option 1: Median A = 6, Median B = 5 (from box - plot, the line in the box is at 5). So 6>5, option 1 is true.
- Option 2: Range A = 9 - 2 = 7, Range B = 10 - 3 = 7. So range A < range B is false.
- Option 3: Upper quartile A = 7.5, Upper quartile B = 9. 7.5 < 9, so option 3 is true.
- Option 4: Lower quartile A = 5, Lower quartile B = 4. 5>4, so option 4 is true.
This is a problem. Maybe the data A is 2,5,5,6,6,6,7,8,9 (9 terms) and the box - plot B has min = 3, Q1 = 4, median = 5, Q3 = 9, max = 10. Then let's re - evaluate:
- Option 1: Median A = 6, Median B = 5. 6>5, so option 1 is true.
- Option 2: Range A = 7, Range B = 7. So option 2 is false.
- Option 3: Upper quartile A = 7.5, Upper quartile B = 9. 7.5 < 9, option 3 is true.…
Step 1: Recall Box - plot Components
A box - plot shows the minimum value (lowest score), the median (median score), the maximum value (highest score), and the quartiles. But it does not show the frequency of individual scores.
Step 2: Analyze Each Option
- The lowest score: can be determined from the left - most point of the whisker.
- The median score: can be determined from the line inside the box.
- The highest score: can be determined from the right - most point of the whisker.
- The score that occurs most frequently (mode): a box - plot does not provide information about the frequency of individual scores, so it can not be determined.
Third Question (Dot - plot of Pets)
First, we need to count the number of dots:
- For 0: 2 dots
- For 1: 2 dots
- For 2: 5 dots
- For 3: 5 dots
- For 4: 3 dots
- For 5: 2 dots
- For 6: 1 dot
Total number of data points: \(2 + 2+5 + 5+3 + 2+1=20\)
Step 1: Find the Median
Since there are 20 data points, the median is the average of the 10th and 11th terms. Let's order the data:
- 0 (2 times), 1 (2 times), 2 (5 times) – cumulative: \(2 + 2+5 = 9\)
- Then 3 (5 times) – the 10th and 11th terms are 3. So median is 3. Option 1 is true.
Step 2: Find the Interquartile Range (IQR)
Q1: median of the first 10 terms. The first 10 terms: 0,0,1,1,2,2,2,2,2,3. The median of these 10 terms (average of 5th and 6th terms) is \(\frac{2 + 2}{2}=2\).
Q3: median of the last 10 terms. The last 10 terms: 3,3,3,3,3,4,4,4,5,5,6 (wait, no, total 20 terms, last 10 terms: positions 11 - 20. The data: after the first 9 terms (0,0,1,1,2,2,2,2,2), the next 5 are 3,3,3,3,3 (positions 10 - 14), then 4,4,4 (positions 15 - 17), 5,5 (positions 18 - 19), 6 (position 20). So the last 10 terms: 3,3,3,3,3,4,4,4,5,5. The median of these 10 terms (average of 5th and 6th terms) is \(\frac{3 + 4}{2}=3.5\)? Wait, no, my counting is wrong. Wait, total number of data points: 2 (0s) + 2 (1s)+5 (2s)+5 (3s)+3 (4s)+2 (5s)+1 (6s) = 20.
Q1: the median of the first 10 data points. The first 10 data points: 0,0,1,1,2,2,2,2,2,3. The 5th term is 2, the 6th term is 2. So Q1 = 2.
Q3: the median of the last 10 data points. The last 10 data points: 3,3,3,3,3,4,4,4,5,5. The 5th term is 3, the 6th term is 4. So Q3=\(\frac{3 + 4}{2}=3.5\). Then IQR = Q3 - Q1=3.5 - 2 = 1.5? Wait, this contradicts option 2. Wait, maybe my counting is wrong. Let's list all data points:
0,0,
1,1,
2,2,2,2,2,
3,3,3,3,3,
4,4,4,
5,5,
6
Now, number the positions from 1 to 20:
1:0, 2:0,
3:1, 4:1,
5:2, 6:2, 7:2, 8:2, 9:2,
10:3, 11:3, 12:3, 13:3, 14:3,
15:4, 16:4, 17:4,
18:5, 19:5,
20:6
Q1: median of first 10 (positions 1 - 10): (position 5 + position 6)/2=(2 + 2)/2 = 2.
Q3: median of last 10 (positions 11 - 20): (position 15 + position 16)/2=(4 + 4)/2 = 4? Wait, no, position 11:3, 12:3, 13:3, 14:3, 15:4, 16:4, 17:4, 18:5, 19:5, 20:6. The median of positions 11 - 20 is the average of position 15 and 16: (4 + 4)/2 = 4. Then IQR = 4 - 2 = 2. So option 2 is true.
Step 3: Find the Mean
Mean=\(\frac{(0\times2)+(1\times2)+(2\times5)+(3\times5)+(4\times3)+(5\times2)+(6\times1)}{20}\)
=\(\frac{0 + 2+10 + 15+12 + 10+6}{20}=\frac{55}{20}=2.75
eq3\). So option 3 is not true.
Step 4: Check for Outliers
Using the IQR method: IQR = 2, Q1 = 2, Q3 = 4. Lower fence = Q1 - 1.5×IQR=2 - 3=-1. Upper fence = Q3+1.5×IQR=4 + 3 = 7. All data points (0,1,2,3,4,5,6) are within [-1,7], so no outliers. Option 4 is true.
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s:
- (Assuming the correct analysis) For the first question, if we consider the lower quartile: Lower quartile of A (5) > Lower quartile of B (4), so the answer is 4) lower quartile of \(A>\) lower quartile of \(B\)
- For the second question, the answer is 4) the score that occurs most frequently
- For the third question, the answer is 3) The mean is 3.