George Benson, Terry T Sincich All 1-15 Chapters Covered With Questions And Verified
Solutions With Detailed Rationales And Case Study.
, TABLE OF CONTENT
1. Statistics, Data, and Statistical Thinking
2. Methods for Describing Sets of Data
3. Probability
4. Random Variables and Probability Distributions
5. Sampling Distributions
6. Inferences Based on a Single Sample: Estimation with Confidence Intervals
7. Inferences Based on a Single Sample: Tests of Hypotheses
8. Inferences Based on Two Samples: Confidence Intervals and Tests of Hypotheses
9. Design of Experiments and Analysis of Variance
10. Categorical Data Analysis
11. Simple Linear Regression
12. Multiple Regression and Model Building
13. Methods for Quality Improvement: Statistical Process Control (Available Online)
14. Time Series: Descriptive Analyses, Models, and Forecasting (Available Online)
15. Nonparametric Statistics (Available Online)
,📘 Chapter 1: Statistics, Data, and Statistical Thinking
Multiple-Choice Questions (21)
1. Statistics is best defined as:
A. The study of accounting principles
B. The science of collecting, analyzing, interpreting, and presenting data
C. The use of computers to process numbers
D. A branch of economics
✅ Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Statistics focuses on data—how it’s gathered, analyzed, interpreted, and communicated
for decision-making.
2. Which of the following is an example of descriptive statistics?
A. Testing a hypothesis
B. Estimating a population mean
C. Creating a frequency table
D. Calculating a confidence interval
✅ Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Descriptive statistics summarize and organize data without making predictions.
3. Inferential statistics is primarily used to:
A. Summarize known data
B. Draw conclusions about a population from a sample
C. Organize data visually
D. Eliminate sampling error
✅ Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Inferential statistics uses sample data to make generalizations about a population.
4. A population is:
A. A group of sampled observations
B. All individuals or objects of interest in a study
C. A random variable
D. Always finite
✅ Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A population includes every member relevant to the study.
5. A sample is:
A. The entire population
B. A subset of the population
C. Always larger than the population
D. Free of bias by definition
✅ Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A sample is selected from the population to represent it.
, 6. Which variable is categorical?
A. Age
B. Income
C. Brand preference
D. Temperature
✅ Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Categorical (qualitative) variables describe attributes or categories.
7. Quantitative variables are:
A. Non-numeric
B. Descriptive only
C. Numeric and measurable
D. Always discrete
✅ Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Quantitative variables represent numerical measurements.
8. Discrete variables:
A. Can take any value within an interval
B. Are always fractions
C. Take countable values
D. Cannot be numeric
✅ Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Discrete variables involve counts (e.g., number of customers).
9. Continuous variables:
A. Are always integers
B. Have gaps between values
C. Can take any value in a range
D. Are categorical
✅ Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Continuous variables include measurements like weight or time.
10. Data measured as labels only are:
A. Ordinal
B. Nominal
C. Interval
D. Ratio
✅ Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Nominal data classify observations without order.