Question 21, 5.B.47
Part 3 of 4
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An American study published in a recent year claimed to find evidence of voting by noncitizens. The conclusion was based largely on a survey
several years prior in which approximately 38,000 registered voters were asked both whether they voted and whether they were citizens. A total of
339 of those surveyed reported being noncitizens, and a total of 48 of these people also said they voted. Complete parts (a) through (d) below
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HW Score: 96%, 24 of 25 points
O Points: 0 of 1
c. Assume that the result from part (b) represents citizens who accidentally said they were noncitizens when they were citizens, and that all these
people voted. If all other results from this survey were accurate, how would this one set of errors change the number of noncitizens who voted? How
large a response error could have accounted for all the noncitizen voting found in the survey?
This set of errors would mean that oncitizen(s) voted. If the error rate were%, it would account for all those who claimed to be noncitizen
voters.
(Type integers or decimals rounded to two decimal places as needed.)
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10:36 AM
10/20/2022