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10 April, 19:44

Joe computed a 95% confidence interval for µ from a specific random sample. His confidence interval was 10.1<µ<12.2. He claims that the probability that µ is in this interval 0.95. What is wrong with his claim? Explain.

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  1. 10 April, 22:49
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    Joe is incorrect. By definition, a 95% confidence interval is the concept where we would expect 95% of all the confidence intervals constructed to contain the true parameter. So that is why he is wrong. Hope this is useful for you
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