A man would have to be at least 73.84′′ tall to be in the top 10% of all men.
(ii)    Using   the calculator, the z   -score  corresponding   to  an  area    of  90% to  the left    of  x is    given   by
invNorm(0.90) = 1.28.   Otherwise,  the solution    is  the same    as  is  given   in  part    (i).    See the
following   Calculator  Tip for a   full    explanation of  the invNorm function.Calculator  Tip: invNorm essentially    reverses    normalcdf   .   That    is, rather  than    reading from    the
margins in, it  reads   from    the table   out (as in  the example above). invNorm(A) returns  the z   -score  that
corresponds to  an  area    equal   to  A lying to  the left    of  z   .   invNorm(A, μ,σ ) returns    the value   of  x that
has area    A to    the left    of  x if    x has   N   (μ,σ    ).Chebyshev’s Rule (Optional–not part of the AP Curriculum)
The 68-95-99.7  rule    works   fine    as  long    as  the distribution    is  approximately   normal. But what    do  you do  if
the shape   of  the distribution    is  unknown or  distinctly  nonnormal   (as,    say,    skewed  strongly    to  the right)?
Remember    that    the 68-95-99.7  rule    told    you that,   in  a   normal  distribution,   approximately   68% of  the data
are within  one standard    deviation   of  the mean,   approximately   95% are within  two standard    deviations,
and approximately   99.7%   are within  three   standard    deviations. Chebyshev’s rule    isn’t   as  strong  as  the
empirical   rule,   but it  does    provide information about   the percent of  terms   contained   in  an  interval    about
the mean    for any distribution.
Let k be    a   number  of  standard    deviations. Then,   according   to  Chebyshev’s rule,   for k > 1,  at  least
of  the data    lie within  k standard  deviations  of  the mean.   For example,    if  k = 2.5,    then
Chebyshev’s rule says that at least of the data lie with 2.5 standard deviations of the
mean.   If  k = 3,  note    the difference  between the 68-95-99.7  rule    and Chebyshev’s rule.   The 68-95-99.7
rule    says    that    approximately 99.7% of  the data    are within  three   standard    deviations  of      .   Chebyshev’s
says that at least of the data are within three standard deviations of . This also
illustrates what was said in the previous paragraph about the empirical rule being stronger than
Chebyshev’s. Note that, if at least of the data are within k standard deviations of , it follows
(algebraically) that at most lie more than k standard deviations from .
Knowledge   of  Chebyshev’s rule    is  not required    in  the AP  Exam,   but its use is  certainly   okay    and is
common  enough  that    it  will    be  recognized  by  AP  readers.
Rapid Review
 - Describe the shape of the histogram below:
 
