week3 quiz live lecture 2010

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B Heard Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

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Week 3 Live Lecture for the Week 3 Quiz

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Page 1: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

B Heard

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 2: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Your Week 3 Quiz is on material covered in Weeks 1 and 2

Your Week 5 Quiz is on material covered in Weeks 3 and 4

Your Week 7 Quiz is on material covered in Weeks 5 and 6

Your Final Exam is comprehensive covering the material in the three prior quizzes plus the material covered in Week 7

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 3: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Some Key Thoughts….

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Page 4: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Name and define and discriminate between the two major branches of statistics (descriptive and inferential).

Define major terms and discriminate between a sample and a population.

Identify examples of the four levels of data and describe the characteristics of each data type.

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Page 5: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

You should know the difference between the methods of collecting data.

Sampling (collecting data from part of a population) Census (collecting data from the entire population – be careful

because you can often do this with small groups such as number of vehicles members of the class own, average salary of the class, number of children per house on your street, etc.)

Simulation (Using probabilities to get your results, for example the probability of getting 3 heads in 5 flips of a coin, number of boys out of 5 children, etc.)

Perform an experiment ( often uses things like a control group like researchers giving one group the real medication and the other something that has no effect)

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Page 6: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

You should be able to identify levels of measurement Nominal (just a name as in colors, types, number on a jersey, etc.)

Ordinal (Categories that can be ranked meaningfully)

Interval (Distance between values has meaning but there is no “absolute zero” like in the Fahrenheit temperature scale”

Ratio (has an “absolute zero” like the number of children you have, etc. always ask yourself is the lowest possible value zero or none? If so it is probably ratio, if it can go below zero like distance above or below sea level it would be Interval)

Chart taken from http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/measlevl.php

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 7: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Know the difference between inferential and descriptive statistics.

Descriptive statistics are used to reveal patterns through the analysis of numeric data (collect non-numeric data and then analyze). Descriptive statistics, not surprisingly, "describe" data that have

been collected. Commonly used descriptive statistics include frequency counts, ranges (high and low scores or values), means, modes, median scores, and standard deviations.

Inferential statistics are used to draw conclusions and make predictions based on the analysis of numeric data. Inferential statistics are used to draw conclusions and make

predictions based on the descriptions of data. They use Probability to “infer” something about the population.

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 8: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Descriptive and Inferential Statistics (additional resources)

See the following links:

http://infinity.cos.edu/faculty/woodbury/Stats/Tutorial/Data_Descr_Infer.htm (has some questions and answers)

http://www.habermas.org/stat2f98.htm

http://www.mdx.ac.uk/WWW/STUDY/glonumst.htm

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Page 9: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Know the difference between quantitative and qualitative data

Quantitative (numbers with meaning)

Qualitative (Colors, types, etc. and numbers without meaning)

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Page 10: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Know the difference in Sampling Techniques

Random (simply picking where every member has an equal chance – drawing out of a bag – generating random numbers)

Stratified (dividing your population into strata and then picking a certain number from each strata)

Systematic (picking every nth one – for example testing every 20th unit off of an assembly line)

Convenience (just asking who is available or who is listening, not making an effort to get a true sample)

Cluster (dividing the population into clusters and sampling everyone in one or two of the clusters)

Understand the relationship between a Sample and a Population

A sample is a subset of a population

Sampling is more convenient and easier

Statistics come from Samples

Parameters come from the population (key word “all”)

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 11: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Know how the standard deviation and variance relate mathematically.

The Standard Deviation is the Square Root of the Variance

And

The Variance in the Standard Deviation squared.

Page 12: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Some questions….

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Page 13: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

A) The following table represents the weights of a number of third graders:

Weight Frequency

58-62 2

63-67 3

68-72 5

73-77 7

78-82 11

83-87 10

88-92 4

93-97 2

Total 44

Be Able to:

Give the relative frequencies of each class

Identify the Class Width

Identify the midpoint of the last class

Identify the class boundaries

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 14: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Weight Frequency Relative Freq* Relative Freq(decimal)*

58-62 2 2/44 0.0455

63-67 3 3/44 0.0682

68-72 5 5/44 0.1136

73-77 7 7/44 0.1591

78-82 11 11/44 0.2500

83-87 10 10/44 0.2273

88-92 4 4/44 0.0909

93-97 2 2/44 0.0455

Total 44

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 15: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Identify the Class Width

Class width is 5 because each class contains five members (first class for example contains 58,59,60,61, and 62) or you can simply the “ending value of the first class “62” from the ending value of the second class “67” (67-62 = 5)

Identify the midpoint of the last class

95 because (97+93)/2 = 95

Identify the class boundaries

Simply subtract .5 from the lower and add .5 to the upper

57.5-62.5, 62.5-67.5, 67.5-72.5, 72.5-77.5, 77.5-82.5, 82.5-87.5, 87.5-92.5, 92.5-97.5

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 16: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

The salary data (in thousands) for Bobby Statz’ first 8 years of his career are 25, 28, 32, 36, 41, 48, 51 and 53

Display the data in a stem and leaf plot.

Find the mean.

Find the median.

Find the mode.

Find the range.

Find the standard deviation.

Find Q1, Q2, Q3

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 17: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Stem and leaf plot for Bobby Statz’ salary data

2| 58

3| 26

4| 18

5| 13

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 18: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 19: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

The water level in inches of 10 randomly selected locations in a pond were taken and were as follows: 28, 37, 42, 42, 47, 52, 57, 57, 60, and 62

Display the data in a stem and leaf plot.Find the mean.Find the median.Find the mode.Find the range.Find the range.Find the standard deviation.Find Q1, Q2, Q3

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 20: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Stem and leaf plot for water level data

2| 8

3| 7

4| 227

5| 277

6| 02

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Page 21: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Find the mean.

48.5 using average function in Excel

Find the median.

50.0 using median function in Excel

Find the mode.

Bimodal, both 42 and 57

Find the range.

Highest value – lowest value = 62-28 = 34

Find the variance.

Using sample variance function in Excel (because these were randomly chosen samples) 124.28 (using “VAR” function)

Find the standard deviation.

Square Root (124.28) = 11.15 (or use “STDEV” function)

Find Q1, Q2, Q3

42, 50, 57 respectively using the quartile function in Excel

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 22: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

As an instructor, I have been collecting data to see if I can model a student’s performance on a standardized entrance exam. I determined that the multiple regression equation y = -250+ 16a + 30b, where a is a student’s grade on a quiz, b is the student’s rank on a class list, gives y, the score on a standardized entrance exam. Based on this equation, what would the standardized entrance exam score for a student who makes a 7 on the quiz and had a ranking of 10 be?

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 23: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

y = -250+ 16a + 30b

Substitute 7 for “a” and 10 for “b”y = -250+ 16*7 + 30*10y = -250 + 112 + 300y = -250 + 412y = 162

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 24: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

In my previous example, I determined that the r^2 value (r squared) was .921. What does this tell me? What if my “r” (correlation coefficient) was .654? What would this say?

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 25: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

In my previous example, I determined that the r^2 value (r squared) was .921. What does this tell me? What if my “r value” (correlation coefficient) was .654? What would this say?

You could say "About 92.1% of the variation in student’s standardized entrance exams can be explained by the score of the quiz and their rank on the class list. The other 7.9% of the variation is either unexplained or is due to other things.

As far as the “r” being .654 , I would say that I have a moderately strong positive correlation.

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 26: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

This data shows the Lab Report scores of 8 selected students and the number of hours they spent preparing their Statistics Lab Report. 40 was the highest score the student could make.

(hours, scores),

(3,34), (2,30), (4,38), (4,40), (2,32), (3,33), (4,37), (5,39)

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Page 27: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

1) Find the equation of the regression line for the given data.

2) What is the r2 for the data?

3) What is the r for the data?

4) What does correlation say about causation?

5) Predict a Lab Report Score for someone who spent one hour on it.

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Page 28: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Predicted score for someone who spent one hour would be:y = 3.158(1) +24.71y = 27.9 or I would say 28 since all scores are in whole numbersAlso, correlation says nothing about causation!

Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 29: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

0 +1-1

Stronger Positive CorrelationStronger Negative Correlation

“r”Not to be used, posted, etc. without my expressed permission. B Heard

Page 30: Week3 Quiz Live Lecture 2010

Drop by and see me on

Facebook

http://www.facebook.com/statcave

You can find a link to these charts

there!