Here are another set of solutions for advanced, but this time by John Drake:
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It should be 5/18I think Q15 is wrong, not sure why its 1/5?
I looked at the 3 sets of solutions posted for discrepancies, and also looked at mine.
* Q15: I got 5/18 for 15a and 3/5 for 15b, which is different to two sets of solutions posted. I have verified 5/18 with 100,000 trials in a spreadsheet.
* Q28c I agree with John Drake's answer: 2ln2-3/2+pi/4
* Q32c should be $931.54 (also verified with a spreadsheet)
* For Q24, my answer is (emphasis on with reference to the context given).
- there is a positive correlation (r>0), meaning that as the age of characters increases, so does the age of the actors
- r=0.4564 means a moderate strength of the correlation. i.e. if the equation of the line of best fit was used for interpolation, it wouldn't be too reliable. For example, for a character of age 15, the equation suggests an actor age of 20. But the graph shows there is a lot of variation for 15 year old characters (14 to 27 years)
- gradient of 1.85 means that on average, for every extra year of character age, actor age increases by 1.85 years
- extrapolation would not be reliable given there is not data for <14 and >17 years for character age, and the study was for teenage characters only.
I don't think there is a point to be made based on skew.Is it wrong to say that there is a positive skew in the data whereby there's a larger concentration of actors aged 14-15?