Register    Login    Search    Rss Feeds

 Page 1 of 1 [ 4 posts ] 



 
Author Message
 Post subject: The lifetimes of all the batteries produced
 Post Posted: Wed Sep 23, 2009 8:43 pm 
Offline
Students


Posts: 2
The lifetimes of all the batteries produced by a certain company in a year have a distribution that is symmetric about the mean m. If the distribution has a standard deviation of d, what percent of the distribution is greater than m+d?

(1) 68 percent of the distribution lies in the interval from m-d to m+d, inclusive.
(2) 16 percent of the distribution is less than m-d.

please help me with this one.
The ans. is D


Top 
 Post subject: Re: The lifetimes of all the batteries produced
 Post Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2009 5:54 am 
Offline
Students


Posts: 68
The question stem tells you that Distribution is symmetrical around mean m so 50% above m and 50% below.

St-1 68% is between m-d and m+d, this tells you that on the side which is higher 34% is between m and m+d so, remaining 16% has to be above m+d. SUFFICIENT

St-2 tells you that 16% is below m-d, so on the other side 16% will be above m+d. SUFFICIENT as well.

This is actually a normal distribution, where 68% is between 1 Standard deviation (SD), 96% between 2 SD and rest within 3 SD.

I am sure instructors will have more to add to it.
hope it helps

npk


Top 
 Post subject: Re: The lifetimes of all the batteries produced
 Post Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 3:10 pm 
Offline
Students


Posts: 74
I think there is some rule for this:

which says that 1 group would be within 68%
2nd group within 16%


Top 
 Post subject: Re: The lifetimes of all the batteries produced
 Post Posted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:00 am 
Offline
ManhattanGMAT Staff


Posts: 6765
as usual, in problems that give a numerical value for standard deviation, you don't actually have to know what standard deviation is. in this problem, you can just treat d as a totally arbitrary variable, and solve the problem as is.

this is a VERY consistent pattern in past gmat problems, so, unless the people who write the test do a complete about-face, it's unlikely to change anytime soon.

see here:
post17297.html#p17297
and
post31646.html#p31646

--

imagine that you have the dsitribution on a number line:


------REGION 1-----(m - d)-------REGION 2-------(m)-------REGION 3------(m + d)-------REGION 4-------

we want region 4.

since the distribution is SYMMETRIC, you must have the same percentage in region 1 as in region 4, and the same percentage in region 2 as in region 3.

statement 1:
regions 2 and 3 total 68%. therefore, they are 34% apiece.
two ways to go from here, both of which prove "sufficient":
(a) each HALF of the distribution is 50%, so region 4 = 50% - 34%, or 16%.
(b) regions 1 and 4 together are 100% - 68% = 32%, so each of regions 1 and 4 is half of that (= 16%).
sufficient.

statement 2:
region 1 is 16%.
since regions 1 and 4 are the same, because of symmetry, it follows that region 4 is also 16%.
sufficient.

ans = D

note that, as promised above, this problem requires zero actual knowledge about how standard deviations work.


Top 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
 
 Page 1 of 1 [ 4 posts ] 





Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

 
 

 
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to: