Answer:
Explained below.
Step-by-step explanation:
In this case we need to determine whether registered voters in rural Minnesota were more likely than registered voters in urban Minnesota to vote in the 2012 Presidential election.
(A)
The hypothesis can be defined as follows:
<em>H</em>₀: The registered voters in rural Minnesota were not more likely than registered voters in urban Minnesota to vote in the 2012 Presidential election, i.e. .
<em>Hₐ</em>: The registered voters in rural Minnesota were more likely than registered voters in urban Minnesota to vote in the 2012 Presidential election, i.e. .
(B)
Compute the proportion of sampled registered voters in rural Minnesota that voted in the 2012 Presidential election as follows:
(C)
Compute the proportion of sampled registered voters in urban Minnesota that voted in the 2012 Presidential election as follows:
(D)
Compute the total proportion as follows:
Compute the test statistic value as follows:
The test statistic value is 1.28.
The decision rule is:
The null hypothesis will be rejected if the p-value of the test is less than the significance level.
Compute the p-value as follows:
The p-value of the test is quite large. The null hypothesis will be rejected at 0.05 significance level.
Thus, there enough evidence suggesting that the registered voters in rural Minnesota were more likely than registered voters in urban Minnesota to vote in the 2012 Presidential election.