A college professor decides to run for Congress in a district with 450,000 registered voters. In a survey she commissioned, 58% of the 4000 registered voters interviewed indicated that they plan to vote for her. The population of interest is the:

A. 450,000 registered voters in the district
B. 42% or 1,680 voters interviewed who plan not to vote for her
C. 58% or 2,320 voters interviewed who plan to vote for her
D. 4,000 registered voters interviewed

Not exactly sure, but I think the answer would be D as the population of interest is the one being polled, which is 58% of the registered voters.

I think the answer is D because its the number of how many people were intrested or how many voters interviewed.

The professor is nterested in the registered voters in the district, and it trying to make some inferences on that group, answer A.

What really should be the population of interest is those of the 450,000 registered voters who will actually vote. Polls are not very good at sampling or predicting the people who people who actually vote, although some try.

I agree with Bob that A is the best answer among those options.

The correct answer is A. 450,000 registered voters in the district.

In this scenario, the population of interest refers to the group of individuals that the survey findings are intended to represent. The college professor is running for Congress in a district with 450,000 registered voters, so the population of interest would be those 450,000 registered voters. The professor is interested in knowing how many voters plan to vote for her in the upcoming election. Therefore, the survey findings are meant to provide an estimate of the proportion of voters in the entire district who plan to vote for her.

Options B, C, and D are not the correct answers because they only represent subsets of the sample interviewed, rather than the entire population of registered voters in the district.