question 77
Multiple Choice
(Situation P) Below are the results of a survey of America's best graduate and professional schools. The top 25 business schools, as determined by reputation, student selectivity, placement success, and graduation rate, are listed in the table.
For each school, three variables were measured: (1) GMAT score for the typical incoming student; (2) student acceptance rate (percentage accepted of all students who applied) ; and (3) starting salary of the typical graduating student. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. School Harvard Stanford Penn Northwestern MIT Chicago Duke Dartmouth Virginia Michigan Columbia Cornell CMU UNC Cal-Berkeley UCLA Texas Indiana NYU Purdue USC Pittsburgh Georgetown Maryland GMAT 644665644640650632630649630620635648630625634640612600610595610605617593 Acc. Rate 15.0%10.219.422.621.330.018.213.423.032.437.114.931.215.424.720.728.129.035.026.831.933.031.728.1 Salary $63,00060,00055,00054,00057,00055,26953,30052,00055,26953.30052,00050,70052,05050,80050,00051,49443,98544,11953,16143,50049,08043,500456499
The academic advisor wants to predict the typical starting salary of a graduate at a top business school using GMAT score of the school as a predictor variable. A simple linear regression of SALARY versus GMAT using the 25 data points in the table are shown below. β0=−92040β^1=228s=3213r2=.66r=.81df=23t=6.67
-For the situation above, which of the following is not an assumption required for the simple linear regression analysis to be valid?
Definitions:
Expenses
Costs incurred in the process of earning revenue, encompassing a broad range of spending from operational to administrative.
Advertising Expense
Advertising Expense represents the costs incurred by a business to promote its products or services through various advertising mediums.
Closing Entries
Entries made in the accounting records at the end of an accounting period to prepare the accounts for the next period.
Journalized
The process of recording transactions in the journal, the first step in the accounting cycle.