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Facial structure of CEOs. In Psychological Science (Vol. 22, 2011), researchers reported that a chief executive officer鈥檚 facial structure can be used to predict a firm鈥檚 financial performance. The study involved measuring the facial width-to-height ratio (WHR) for each in a sample of 55 CEOs at publicly traded Fortune 500 firms. These WHR values (determined by a computer analyzing a photo of the CEO鈥檚 face) had a mean ofx=1.96 and a standard deviation of s=0.15.

a. Find and interpret a 95% confidence interval for , the mean facial WHR for all CEOs at publicly traded Fortune 500 firms.

b. The researchers found that CEOs with wider faces (relative to height) tended to be associated with firms that had greater financial performance. They based their inference on an equation that uses facial WHR to predict financial performance. Suppose an analyst wants to predict the financial performance of a Fortune 500 firm based on the value of the true mean facial WHR of CEOs. The analyst wants to use the value of =2.2. Do you recommend he use this value?

Short Answer

Expert verified

a.The 95% confidence interval for the mean facial width-to-height ratio (WHR) for all CEOs at publicly traded Fortune 500 firms is (1.9204,1.9996).

b.No, the analyst does not use the value=2.2

Step by step solution

01

Given information

x=1.96,n=55ands=0.15

02

Calculating 95% confidence interval for μ

For the confidence level 95%, the level of significance is 0.95.

1-=0.95=0.052=0.025

From z score table, the value of z2is given below:

z2=z0.025=1.96

Thus, the value ofz2 is 1.96.

The confidence interval is obtained below:

xz2x=xz2n

=1.961.960.1555=1.9204,1.9996

Thus, the 95% confidence interval for the mean facial width-to-height ratio (WHR) for all CEOs at publicly traded Fortune 500 firms is (1.9204,1.9996).

03

Step 3:

b.

No, the analyst does not use the value=2.2, because the value of does not contain in the 95% confidence interval. That is, the value 2.2 does not lie between 1.9204 and 1.9996. Hence, the value =2.2is impossible value for the average facial width -to-height ratio (WHR).

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