1 the normal distribution william p. wattles psychology 302

31
1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Upload: dwayne-cox

Post on 03-Jan-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

1

The Normal Distribution

William P. Wattles

Psychology 302

Page 2: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Frequency distribution

A table or graph that indicates all the values a variable can take and how often each occurs.

Page 3: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Density curvesA density curve is a mathematical model of a distribution.

It is always on or above the horizontal axis.

The total area under the curve, by definition, is equal to 1, or 100%.

The area under the curve for a range of values is the proportion of all observations for that range.

Histogram of a sample with the smoothed density curve

theoretically describing the

population

Page 4: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Normal DistributionGaussian Distribution

Mean=Median=Mode

Page 5: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Normal Distribution

Normal distributions have the same general shape. They are symmetric with scores more concentrated in the middle than in the tails.

Page 6: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30

Here the means are different

( = 10, 15, and 20) while the

standard deviations are the same

( = 3).

Here the means are the same ( =

15) while the standard deviations

are different ( = 2, 4, and 6).

A family of density curves

Page 7: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

40

Z scores and the normal curve

The 68-95-99.7 rule 68% fall within one standard deviation

of the mean 95% fall within two standard deviations

of the mean 99.7% of the observations fall with three

standard deviations of the mean

Page 8: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302
Page 9: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Normal Curve

Page 10: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Because all Normal distributions share the same properties, we can

standardize our data to transform any Normal curve N () into the

standard Normal curve N (0,1).

The standard Normal distribution

For each x we calculate a new value, z (called a z-score).

N(0,1)

=>

z

x

N(64.5, 2.5)

Standardized height (no units)

Page 11: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

36

Standard Scores (Z-scores)

Can use appendix A (page 690) in back of book to determine the area under the curve cut off by any Z-score.

Page 12: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Using Table A

(…)

.0082 is the area under N(0,1) left of z = -2.40

.0080 is the area under N(0,1) left of z = -2.41

0.0069 is the area under N(0,1) left of z = -2.46

Page 13: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

47

Area under the curve

Height of young women– Mean = 64– Standard deviation =

2.7

What proportion of women are less than 70 inches tall?

Page 14: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

47

Area under the curve

Height of young women– Mean = 64– Standard deviation = 2.7

Z score for 5’10” +2.22 Area to the left = .9868 A woman 70 inches tall is taller than

99% of her peers.

Page 15: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

WAIS mean=100, SD=15

What percent are retarded, I.e. less than 70?

Page 16: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

WAIS mean=100, SD=15

What percent are MENSA eligible, I.e. greater than 130?

Page 17: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Area under the curve

WAIS mean=100, SD=15 Z=X-mean/standard deviation What percent are retarded, I.e. less

than 70? Z=70-100/15, Z=-2.00, 2.28% What percent are MENSA eligible, I.e.

greater than 130? Z=130-100/15 Z=+2.00, 2.28%

Page 18: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

58

Percentile scores

The percent of all scores at or below a certain point.

The same procedure as with proportions

More commonly used than proportions

Page 19: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Sample Problem

SAT mean=1020, SD=207

Division 1 athletes must have 820 to compete? Is this fair?

What percent score less than 820?

Page 20: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Normal Curve

Page 21: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

SAT mean=1020, SD=207

What percent score less than 820?

mean 1020sd 207X 820Z -0.97area to left 0.1686.1660

Page 22: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

SAT mean=1020, SD=207

Division 1 athletes must have 720 to practice? Is this fair?

What percent score less than 720?

Page 23: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Normal Curve

Page 24: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

SAT mean=1020, SD=207

What percent score less than 720?

mean 1020sd 207X 720Z -1.45area to left 0.0885.0735

Page 25: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

What is a Z score?

Page 26: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

A z-score tells how many standard deviations the score or observation falls from the mean and in which direction

Page 27: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Z-Score

A Z-score tells how many standard deviations an individual’s score lies above or below the mean.

Page 28: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302
Page 29: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Psy 302 Paper

1. Pick a subject that interests you.

2. Do some library research.

3. Collect data a. two groups

(minimum 15 per group)

b. measurement data

1. Analyze data with t-test a. SPSS b. Excel

2. Make a histogram of your results.

3. Write paper APA style per sample paper.

Page 30: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

Houston’s G.M. Is a Revolutionary Spirit in a Risk-

Averse Mind Daryl Morey has

charts and spreadsheets and clever formulas for evaluating basketball players, and a degree from M.I.T. to make sense of it all.

Page 31: 1 The Normal Distribution William P. Wattles Psychology 302

60

The End