Lucky Charms are sold in boxes with an advertised mean weight of 20.5 oz. The standard deviation is known to be 2.25 oz. A consumer group claims that the makers of Lucky Charms are cheating consumers by underfilling the boxes. They take a sample of 50 boxes and find an average weight of 20.4 oz. What is the set of hypotheses that should be used to test the accuracy of the advertised weight?

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Answer:

Set of hypothesis.

Step-by-step explanation:

We are given the following in the question:

Population mean, μ =  20.5 oz

Sample mean, [tex]\bar{x}[/tex] = 20.4 oz

Sample size, n = 50

Population standard deviation, σ =  2.25 oz

First, we design the null and the alternate hypothesis

[tex]H_{0}: \mu = 20.5\text{ oz}\\H_A: \mu < 20.5\text{ oz}[/tex]

We use One-tailed z test(left tailed) to perform this hypothesis.

Formula:

[tex]z_{stat} = \displaystyle\frac{\bar{x} - \mu}{\frac{\sigma}{\sqrt{n}} }[/tex]

Putting all the values, we have

[tex]z_{stat} = \displaystyle\frac{20.4 - 20.5}{\frac{2.25}{\sqrt{50}} } = -0.3142[/tex]

Based on the significance level, we can make our decision and complete the hypothesis testing.

We may accept the null hypothesis or fail to accept depending on different significance level.

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