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9812947939How do you check if there are outliers?calculate IQR; anything above Q3+1.5(IQR) or below Q1-1.5(IQR) is an outlier0
9812947940If a graph is skewed, should we calculate the median or the mean? Why?median; it is resistant to skews and outliers1
9812947941If a graph is roughly symmetrical, should we calculate the median or the mean? Why?mean; generally is more accurate if the data has no outliers2
9812947942What is in the five number summary?Minimum, Q1, Median, Q3, Maximum3
9812947943Relationship between variance and standard deviation?variance=(standard deviation)^24
9812947945standard deviationthe standard deviation is the square root of the variance5
9812947946What should we use to measure spread if the median was calculated?IQR6
9812947947What should we use to measure spread if the mean was calculated?standard deviation7
9812947948What is the IQR? How much of the data does it represent?Q3-Q1; 50%8
9812948131What is the formula for standard deviation?9
9812947950Categorical variables vs. Quantitative VariablesCategorical: individuals can be assigned to one of several groups or categories Quantitative: takes numberical values10
9812947952Things to include when describing a distributionCenter (Mean or Median), Unusual Gaps or Outliers, Spread (Standard Deviation or IQR), Shape (Roughly Symmetric, slightly/heavily skewed left or right, bimodal, range)11
9812947953Explain how to standardize a variable. What is the purpose of standardizing a variable?Subtract the distribution mean and then divide by standard deviation. Tells us how many standard deviations from the mean an observation falls, and in what direction.12
9812947954What effect does standardizing the values have on the distribution?shape would be the same as the original distribution, the mean would become 0, the standard deviation would become 113
9812947955What is a density curve?a curve that (a) is on or above the horizontal axis, and (b) has exactly an area of 114
9812947956Inverse Normwhen you want to find the percentile: invNorm (area, mean, standard deviation)15
9812947957z(x-mean)/standard deviation16
9812947958pth percentilethe value with p percent observations less than is17
9812947959cumulative relative frequency graphcan be used to describe the position of an individual within a distribution or to locate a specified percentile of the distribution18
9812947960How to find and interpret the correlation coefficient r for a scatterplotSTAT plot, scatter, L1 and L2 (Plot 1: ON); STAT --> CALC --> 8:LinReg(a+bx) No r? --> 2nd 0 (Catalog) down to Diagnostic ON19
9812947961rtells us the strength of a LINEAR association. -1 to 1. Not resistant to outliers20
9812947962r^2the proportion (percent) of the variation in the values of y that can be accounted for by the least squares regression line21
9812947963residual plota scatterplot of the residuals against the explanatory variable. Residual plots help us assess how well a regression line fits the data. It should have NO PATTERN22
9812947964regression linea line that describes how a response variable y changes as an explanatory variable x changes. We often use a regression line to predict the value of y for a given value of x.23
9812947965residual formularesidual=y-y(hat) aka observed y - predicted y24
9812947966What method do you use to check if a distribution or probability is binomial?BINS: 1. Binary: There only two outcomes (success and failure) 2. Independent: The events independent of one another? 3. Number: There is a fixed number of trials 4. Success: The probability of success equal in each trial25
9812947967What method do you use to check if a distribution or probability is geometric?BITS: 1. Binary: There only two outcomes (success and failure) 2. Independent: The events independent of one another 3. Trials: There is not a fixed number of trials 4. Success: The probability of success equal in each trial26
9812947968nnumber of trials27
9812947969pprobability of success28
9812947970knumber of successes29
9812947971Binomial Formula for P(X=k)(n choose k) p^k (1-p)^(n-k)30
9812947972Binomial Calculator Function to find P(X=k)binompdf(n,p,k)31
9812947973Binomial Calculator Function for P(X≤k)binomcdf(n,p,k)32
9812947974Binomial Calculator Function for P(X≥k)1-binomcdf(n,p,k-1)33
9812947975mean of a binomial distributionnp34
9812947976standard deviation of a binomial distribution√(np(1-p))35
9812947977Geometric Formula for P(X=k)(1-p)^(k-1) x p36
9812947978Geometric Calculator Function to find P(X=k)geometpdf(p,k)37
9812947979Geometric Calculator Function for P(X≤k)geometcdf(p,k)38
9812947980Geometric Calculator Function for P(X≥k)1-geometcdf(p,k-1)39
9812947981Mean of a geometric distribution1/p=expected number of trials until success40
9812947982Standard deviation of a geometric distribution√((1-p)/(p²))41
9812947983What do you do if the binomial probability is for a range, rather than a specific number?Take binomcdf(n,p,maximum) - binomcdf(n,p,minimum-1)42
9812947984how do you enter n choose k into the calculator?type "n" on home screen, go to MATH --> PRB --> 3: ncr, type "k"43
9812947985μ(x+y)μx+μy44
9812947986μ(x-y)μx-μy45
9812947987σ(x+y)√(σ²x+σ²y)46
9812947988What does adding or subtracting a constant effect?Measures of center (median and mean). Does NOT affect measures of spread (IQR and Standard Deviation) or shape.47
9812947989What does multiplying or dividing a constant effect?Both measures of center (median and mean) and measures of spread (IQR and standard deviation). Shape is not effected. For variance, multiply by a² (if y=ax+b).48
9812947990σ(x-y)√(σ²x+σ²y) --> you add to get the difference because variance is distance from mean and you cannot have a negative distance49
9812947991calculate μx by handX1P1+X2P2+.... XKPK (SigmaXKPK)50
9812947992calculate var(x) by hand(X1-μx)²p(1)+(X2-μx)²p(2)+.... (Sigma(Xk-μx)²p(k))51
9812947993Standard deviationsquare root of variance52
9812947994discrete random variablesa fixed set of possible x values (whole numbers)53
9812947995continuous random variables-x takes all values in an interval of numbers -can be represented by a density curve (area of 1, on or above the horizontal axis)54
9812947996What is the variance of the sum of 2 random variables X and Y?(σx)²+(σy)², but ONLY if x and y are independent.55
9812947997mutually exclusiveno outcomes in common56
9812947998addition rule for mutually exclusive events P (A U B)P(A)+P(B)57
9812947999complement rule P(A^C)1-P(A)58
9812948000general addition rule (not mutually exclusive) P(A U B)P(A)+P(B)-P(A n B)59
9812948001intersection P(A n B)both A and B will occur60
9812948002conditional probability P (A | B)P(A n B) / P(B)61
9812948003independent events (how to check independence)P(A) = P(A|B) P(B)= P(B|A)62
9812948004multiplication rule for independent events P(A n B)P(A) x P(B)63
9812948005general multiplication rule (non-independent events) P(A n B)P(A) x P(B|A)64
9812948006sample spacea list of possible outcomes65
9812948007probability modela description of some chance process that consists of 2 parts: a sample space S and a probability for each outcome66
9812948008eventany collection of outcomes from some chance process, designated by a capital letter (an event is a subset of the sample space)67
9812948009What is the P(A) if all outcomes in the sample space are equally likely?P(A) = (number of outcomes corresponding to event A)/(total number of outcomes in sample space)68
9812948010Complementprobability that an event does not occur69
9812948011What is the sum of the probabilities of all possible outcomes?170
9812948012What is the probability of two mutually exclusive events?P(A U B)= P(A)+P(B)71
9812948013five basic probability rules1. for event A, 0≤P(A)≤1 2. P(S)=1 3. If all outcomes in the sample space are equally likely, P(A)=number of outcomes corresponding to event A / total number of outcomes in sample space 4. P(A^C) = 1-P(A) 5. If A and B are mutually exclusive, P(A n B)=P(A)+P(B)72
9812948014When is a two-way table helpfuldisplays the sample space for probabilities involving two events more clearly73
9812948015In statistics, what is meant by the word "or"?could have either event or both74
9812948016When can a Venn Diagram be helpful?visually represents the probabilities of not mutually exclusive events75
9812948017What is the general addition rule for two events?If A and B are any two events resulting from some chance process, then the probability of A or B (or both) is P(A U B)= P(A)+P(B)-P(A n B)76
9812948018What does the intersection of two or more events mean?both event A and event B occur77
9812948019What does the union of two or more events mean?either event A or event B (or both) occurs78
9812948020What is the law of large numbers?If we observe more and more repetitions of any chance process, the proportion of times that a specific outcome occurs approaches a single value, which we can call the probability of that outcome79
9812948021the probability of any outcome...is a number between 0 and 1 that describes the proportion of times the outcome would occur in a very long series of repetitions80
9812948022How do you interpret a probability?We interpret probability to represent the most accurate results if we did an infinite amount of trials81
9812948023What are the two myths about randomness?1. Short-run regularity --> the idea that probability is predictable in the short run 2. Law of Averages --> people except the alternative outcome to follow a different outcome82
9812948024simulationthe imitation of chance behavior, based on a model that accurately reflects the situation83
9812948025Name and describe the four steps in performing a simulation1. State: What is the question of interest about some chance process 2. Plan: Describe how to use a chance device to imitate one repetition of process; clearly identify outcomes and measured variables 3. Do: Perform many repetitions of the simulation 4. Conclude: results to answer question of interest84
9812948026What are some common errors when using a table of random digits?not providing a clear description of the simulation process for the reader to replicate the simulation85
9812948027What does the intersection of two or more events mean?both event A and event B occur86
9812948028sampleThe part of the population from which we actually collect information. We use information from a sample to draw conclusions about the entire population87
9812948029populationIn a statistical study, this is the entire group of individuals about which we want information88
9812948030sample surveyA study that uses an organized plan to choose a sample that represents some specific population. We base conclusions about the population on data from the sample.89
9812948031convenience sampleA sample selected by taking the members of the population that are easiest to reach; particularly prone to large bias.90
9812948032biasThe design of a statistical study shows ______ if it systematically favors certain outcomes.91
9812948033voluntary response samplePeople decide whether to join a sample based on an open invitation; particularly prone to large bias.92
9812948034random samplingThe use of chance to select a sample; is the central principle of statistical sampling.93
9812948035simple random sample (SRS)every set of n individuals has an equal chance to be the sample actually selected94
9812948036strataGroups of individuals in a population that are similar in some way that might affect their responses.95
9812948037stratified random sampleTo select this type of sample, first classify the population into groups of similar individuals, called strata. Then choose a separate SRS from each stratum to form the full sample.96
9812948038cluster sampleTo take this type of sample, first divide the population into smaller groups. Ideally, these groups should mirror the characteristics of the population. Then choose an SRS of the groups. All individuals in the chosen groups are included in the sample.97
9812948039inferenceDrawing conclusions that go beyond the data at hand.98
9812948040margin of errorTells how close the estimate tends to be to the unknown parameter in repeated random sampling.99
9812948041sampling frameThe list from which a sample is actually chosen.100
9812948042undercoverageOccurs when some members of the population are left out of the sampling frame; a type of sampling error.101
9812948043nonresponseOccurs when a selected individual cannot be contacted or refuses to cooperate; an example of a nonsampling error.102
9812948044wording of questionsThe most important influence on the answers given to a survey. Confusing or leading questions can introduce strong bias, and changes in wording can greatly change a survey's outcome. Even the order in which questions are asked matters.103
9812948045observational studyObserves individuals and measures variables of interest but does not attempt to influence the responses.104
9812948046experimentDeliberately imposes some treatment on individuals to measure their responses.105
9812948047explanatory variableA variable that helps explain or influences changes in a response variable.106
9812948048response variableA variable that measures an outcome of a study.107
9812948049lurking variablea variable that is not among the explanatory or response variables in a study but that may influence the response variable.108
9812948050treatmentA specific condition applied to the individuals in an experiment. If an experiment has several explanatory variables, a treatment is a combination of specific values of these variables.109
9812948051experimental unitthe smallest collection of individuals to which treatments are applied.110
9812948052subjectsExperimental units that are human beings.111
9812948053factorsthe explanatory variables in an experiment are often called this112
9812948054random assignmentAn important experimental design principle. Use some chance process to assign experimental units to treatments. This helps create roughly equivalent groups of experimental units by balancing the effects of lurking variables that aren't controlled on the treatment groups.113
9812948055replicationAn important experimental design principle. Use enough experimental units in each group so that any differences in the effects of the treatments can be distinguished from chance differences between the groups.114
9812948056double-blindAn experiment in which neither the subjects nor those who interact with them and measure the response variable know which treatment a subject received.115
9812948057single-blindAn experiment in which either the subjects or those who interact with them and measure the response variable, but not both, know which treatment a subject received.116
9812948058placeboan inactive (fake) treatment117
9812948059placebo effectDescribes the fact that some subjects respond favorably to any treatment, even an inactive one118
9812948060blockA group of experimental units that are known before the experiment to be similar in some way that is expected to affect the response to the treatments.119
9812948061inference about the populationUsing information from a sample to draw conclusions about the larger population. Requires that the individuals taking part in a study be randomly selected from the population of interest.120
9812948062inference about cause and effectUsing the results of an experiment to conclude that the treatments caused the difference in responses. Requires a well-designed experiment in which the treatments are randomly assigned to the experimental units.121
9812948063lack of realismWhen the treatments, the subjects, or the environment of an experiment are not realistic. Lack of realism can limit researchers' ability to apply the conclusions of an experiment to the settings of greatest interest.122
9812948064institutional review boardA basic principle of data ethics. All planned studies must be approved in advance and monitored by _____________ charged with protecting the safety and well-being of the participants.123
9812948065informed consentA basic principle of data ethics. Individuals must be informed in advance about the nature of a study and any risk of harm it may bring. Participating individuals must then consent in writing.124
9812948066simulationa model of random events125
9812948067censusa sample that includes the entire population126
9812948068population parametera number that measures a characteristic of a population127
9812948069systematic sampleevery fifth individual, for example, is chosen128
9812948070multistage samplea sampling design where several sampling methods are combined129
9812948071sampling variabilitythe naturally occurring variability found in samples130
9812948072levelsthe values that the experimenter used for a factor131
9812948073the four principles of experimental designcontrol, randomization, replication, and blocking132
9812948074completely randomized designa design where all experimental units have an equal chance of receiving any treatment133
9812948075interpreting p valueif the true mean/proportion of the population is (null), the probability of getting a sample mean/proportion of _____ is (p-value).134
9812948076p̂1-p̂2 center, shape, and spreadcenter: p1-p2 shape: n1p1, n1(1-p1), n2p2, and n2(1-p2) ≥ 10 spread (if 10% condition checks): √((p1(1-p1)/n1)+(p2(1-p2)/n2)135
9812948077probability of getting a certain p̂1-p̂2 (ex. less than .1)plug in center and spread into bell curve, find probability136
9812948078Confidence intervals for difference in proportions formula(p̂1-p̂2) plus or minus z*(√((p1(1-p1)/n1)+(p2(1-p2)/n2))137
9812948079When do you use t and z test/intervals?t for mean z for proportions138
9812948132Significance test for difference in proportions139
9812948080What is a null hypothesis?What is being claimed. Statistical test designed to assess strength of evidence against null hypothesis. Abbreviated by Ho.140
9812948081What is an alternative hypothesis?the claim about the population that we are trying to find evidence FOR, abbreviated by Ha141
9812948082When is the alternative hypothesis one-sided?Ha less than or greater than142
9812948083When is the alternative hypothesis two-sided?Ha is not equal to143
9812948084What is a significance level?fixed value that we compare with the P-value, matter of judgement to determine if something is "statistically significant".144
9812948085What is the default significance level?α=.05145
9812948086Interpreting the p-valueif the true mean/proportion of the population is (null), the probability of getting a sample mean/proportion of _____ is (p-value).146
9812948087p value ≤ αWe reject our null hypothesis. There is sufficient evidence to say that (Ha) is true.147
9812948088p value ≥ αWe fail to reject our null hypothesis. There is insufficient evidence to say that (Ho) is not true.148
9812948089reject Ho when it is actually trueType I Error149
9812948090fail to reject Ho when it is actually falseType II Error150
9812948091Power definitionprobability of rejecting Ho when it is false151
9812948092probability of Type I Errorα152
9812948093probability of Type II Error1-power153
9812948094two ways to increase powerincrease sample size/significance level α154
98129480955 step process: z/t testState --> Ho/Ha, define parameter Plan --> one sample, z test Check --> random/normal/independent Do --> find p hat, find test statistic (z), use test statistic to find p-value Conclude --> p value ≤ α reject Ho p value ≥ α fail to reject Ho155
9812948133Formula for test statistic (μ)156
9812948096Formula for test statistic (p̂) (where p represents the null)(p̂-p)/(√((p)(1-p))/n)157
9812948097probability of a Type II Error?overlap normal distribution for null and true. Find rejection line. Use normalcdf158
9812948098when do you use z tests?for proportions159
9812948099when do you use t tests?for mean (population standard deviation unknown)160
9812948100finding p value for t teststcdf(min, max, df)161
9812948101Sample paired t teststate--> Ho: μ1-μ2=0 (if its difference) plan --> one sample, paired t test check --> random, normal, independent do --> find test statistic and p value conclude --> normal conclusion162
9812948102What does statistically significant mean in context of a problem?The sample mean/proportion is far enough away from the true mean/proportion that it couldn't have happened by chance163
9812948103When doing a paired t-test, to check normality, what do you do?check the differences histogram (μ1-μ2)164
9812948104How to interpret a C% Confidence LevelIn C% of all possible samples of size n, we will construct an interval that captures the true parameter (in context).165
9812948105How to interpret a C% Confidence IntervalWe are C% confident that the interval (_,_) will capture the true parameter (in context).166
9812948106What conditions must be checked before constructing a confidence interval?random, normal, independent167
9812948107C% confidence intervals of sample proportions, 5 step processState: Construct a C% confidence interval to estimate... Plan: one sample z-interval for proportions Check: Random, Normal, Independent Do: Find the standard error and z*, then p hat +/- z* Conclude: We are C% confident that the interval (_,_) will capture the true parameter (in context).168
9812948134What's the z interval standard error formula?169
9812948108How do you find z*?InvNorm(#)170
9812948109How do you find the point estimate of a sample?subtract the max and min confidence interval, divide it by two (aka find the mean of the interval ends)171
9812948110How do you find the margin of error, given the confidence interval?Ask, "What am I adding or subtracting from the point estimate?" So find the point estimate, then find the difference between the point estimate and the interval ends172
9812948111Finding sample size proportions: When p hat is unknown, or you want to guarantee a margin of error less than or equal to:use p hat=.5173
9812948112Finding the confidence interval when the standard deviation of the population is *known*x bar +/- z*(σ/√n)174
9812948113Checking normal condition for z* (population standard deviation known)starts normal or CLT175
9812948114Finding the confidence interval when the standard deviation of the population is *unknown* (which is almost always true)x bar +/- t*(Sx/√n)176
9812948115degrees of freedomn-1177
9812948116How do you find t*?InvT(area to the left, df)178
9812948117What is the standard error?same as standard deviation, but we call it "standard error" because we plugged in p hat for p (we are estimating)179
9812948118a point estimator is a statistic that...provides an estimate of a population parameter.180
9812948119Explain the two conditions when the margin of error gets smaller.Confidence level C decreases, sample size n increases181
9812948120Does the confidence level tell us the chance that a particular confidence interval captures the population parameter?NO; the confidence interval gives us a set of plausible values for the parameter182
9812948121Sx and σx: which is which?Sx is for a sample, σx is for a population183
9812948122How do we know when do use a t* interval instead of a z interval?you are not given the population standard deviation184
9812948123Checking normal condition for t* (population standard deviation unknown)Normal for sample size... -n -n<15: if the data appears closely normal (roughly symmetric, single peak, no outliers)185
9812948124How to check if a distribution is normal for t*, population n<15plug data into List 1, look at histogram. Conclude with "The histogram looks roughly symmetric, so we should be safe to use the t distribution)186
9812948125t* confidence interval, 5 step processState: Construct a __% confidence interval to estimate... Plan: one sample t interval for a population mean Check: Random, Normal, Independent (for Normal, look at sample size and go from there) Do: Find the standard error (Sx/√n) and t*, then do x bar +/- t*(standard error) Conclude: We are __% confident that the interval (_,_) will capture the true parameter (in context).187
9812948126margin of error formulaz* or t* (standard error)188
9812948127When calculating t interval, what is it and where do you find the data?x bar plus or minus t* (Sx/√n) -get x bar and Sx using 1 Var Stats -t*=Invt(area to the left, df) -population (n) will be given189
9812948128What is it looking for if it asks for the appropriate critical value?z/t* interval190

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