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The following grouped frequency distribution summarises the number of minutes, to the nearest minute, that a random sample of 100 motorists were delayed by roadworks on a stretch of motorway one Monday - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 2 - 2018 - Paper 1

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The following grouped frequency distribution summarises the number of minutes, to the nearest minute, that a random sample of 100 motorists were delayed by roadworks... show full transcript

Worked Solution & Example Answer:The following grouped frequency distribution summarises the number of minutes, to the nearest minute, that a random sample of 100 motorists were delayed by roadworks on a stretch of motorway one Monday - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 2 - 2018 - Paper 1

Step 1

Calculate the width and the height of the bar representing a delay of (11–15) minutes.

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Answer

To calculate the width of the bar for the delay of (11–15) minutes, we take the class interval width:

Width = 15 - 11 = 4 minutes.

In the histogram, to find the height corresponding to this class, we first calculate the frequency density since the bar represents the number of motorists.

Frequency density = ( \frac{f}{\text{width}} = \frac{12}{4} = 3 ) motorists per minute.

Thus, the height of the bar = 3 cm.

Step 2

Use linear interpolation to estimate the median delay.

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Answer

To estimate the median delay, we first find the cumulative frequency. The median is at the position ( \frac{n}{2} = \frac{100}{2} = 50 ) in the cumulative frequency distribution.

Cumulative frequencies:

  • For (3–6): 38
  • For (7–8): 38 + 25 = 63 (median lies here) Thus, the median class is (7–8).

Using linear interpolation:

  • Lower boundary of median class = 7
  • Frequency of median class = 25
  • Cumulative frequency before median class = 38

Median = Lower boundary + ( rac{(\frac{n}{2} - \text{cumulative frequency before})}{f} \cdot ext{class width} ) = 7 + ( \frac{(50 - 38)}{25} \cdot 1 ) = 7 + 0.48 = 7.48 (approx).

Step 3

Calculate an estimate of the mean delay.

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Answer

To find the mean delay, we can use the formula:

( \text{Mean} = \frac{\sum (f \cdot x)}{n} )

Where:

  • ( f ) = number of motorists
  • ( x ) = delay midpoint
  • ( n = 100 )

Calculating ( f \cdot x ):

  • (3–6): 38 * 4.5 = 171
  • (7–8): 25 * 7.5 = 187.5
  • (9–10): 18 * 9.5 = 171
  • (11–15): 12 * 13 = 156
  • (16–20): 7 * 18 = 126

Total ( \sum (f \cdot x) = 171 + 187.5 + 171 + 156 + 126 = 811.5 )

Thus, Mean = ( \frac{811.5}{100} = 8.115 = 8.12 ) (approx).

Step 4

Calculate an estimate of the standard deviation of the delays.

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Answer

The standard deviation (( , \sigma )) is calculated using:

( \sigma = \sqrt{\frac{\sum f(x - \text{mean})^2}{n}} )

Using the mean calculated earlier (8.12):

  1. Calculate ( (x - \text{mean})^2 ) for each class:
  • (3–6): ( (4.5 - 8.12)^2 \cdot 38 )
  • (7–8): ( (7.5 - 8.12)^2 \cdot 25 )
  • (9–10): ( (9.5 - 8.12)^2 \cdot 18 )
  • (11–15): ( (13 - 8.12)^2 \cdot 12 )
  • (16–20): ( (18 - 8.12)^2 \cdot 7 )

Calculate the total sum and divide by 100, then take the square root to find ( \sigma = 3.89 ) (approx).

Step 5

Evaluate this coefficient for the above data, giving your answer to 2 significant figures.

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Answer

To find the coefficient of skewness: [ \text{Skewness} = \frac{3(\text{mean} - \text{median})}{\text{standard deviation}} ] Substituting the known values: Mean = 8.12, Median = 7.48, Standard Deviation = 3.89: [ = \frac{3(8.12 - 7.48)}{3.89} \approx 0.49 \text{(to 2 significant figures)} ]

Step 6

State, giving a reason, how the delays on this stretch of motorway on Friday are different from the delays on Monday.

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Answer

On Friday, the coefficient of skewness is -0.22, indicating a negative skew. This suggests that there are fewer longer delays compared to Monday's delays, which have a positive skew (0.49). In practical terms, the delays on Friday tend to be shorter and more clustered around the lower end, contrasting with the longer delays observed on Monday.

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