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AP Statistics - Chapter 1 Flashcards

Exploring Data

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7203499877The 1.5 x IQR Rule for OutliersCall an observation an outlier if it falls more than 1.5 x IQR above the third quartile or below the first quartile. This is NOT on the AP Exam Formula Sheet provided.0
7203499878AssociationOccurs between two variables if specific values of one variable tend to occur in common with specific values of the other1
7203499879Back-to-back stemplotUsed to compare the distribution of a quantitative variable for to groups. Each observation in both groups is separated into a stem, consisting of all but the final digit, and a leaf, the final digit. The stems are arranged in a vertical column with the smallest on the top. The values from one group are plotted on the left side of the stem and the values from the other group are plotted on the right side of the stem. Each leaf is written in the row next its stem, with the leaves arranged in increasing order out from the stem.2
7203499880Bar graphUsed to display the distribution of a categorical variable or to compare the sizes of different quantities. The horizontal axis of a bar graph identifies the categories or quantities being compared. Drawn with blank spaces between the bars to separate the items being compared.3
7203499881BimodalDescribes a graph of quantitative data with two clear peaks4
7203499882BoxplotA graph of the five-number summary. The box spans the quartiles and shows the spread of the central half of the distribution. The median is marked within the box. Lines extend from the box to the extreme (if the extreme is not an outlier) and show the full spread of the data.5
7203499883Categorical VariablePlaces an individual into one of several groups or categories. (Also called qualitative.)6
7203499884Conditional distributionDescribes the values of one variable among individuals who have a specific value of another variable. There is a separate conditional distribution for each value of the other variable.7
7203499885Data analysisA process of describing data using graphs and numerical summaries8
7203499886DotplotA simple graph that shows each data value as a dot above its location on a number line9
7203499887DistributionTells what values a variable takes and how often it takes these values10
7203499888DistributionTells what values a variable takes and how often it takes these values11
7203499889First quartile Q1If the observations in a data set are ordered from lowest to highest, the first quartile Q1 is the median of the observations whose position is to the left of the median12
7203499890The Five-Number SummaryConsists of the minimum observation, the first quartile, the median, the third quartile, and the maximum observation, written in order from smallest to largest. In symbols, the five-number summary is Minimum Q1 M Q3 Maximum13
7203499891Frequency tableDisplays the count (frequency) of observations in each category or class14
7203499892HistogramDisplays the distribution of a quantitative variable. The horizontal axis is marked in the units of measurement for the variable. The vertical axis contains the scale of counts or percents. Each bar in the graph represents an equal-width class. The base of the bar covers the class, and the bar height is the class frequency or relative frequency.15
7203499893IndividualsObjects described by a set of data. Individuals may be people, animals, or things.16
7203499894InferenceDrawing conclusions that go beyond the data at hand17
7203499895Interquartile rangeIQR=Q3-Q118
7203499896Marginal distributionThe marginal distribution of one of the categorical variables in a two-way table of counts is the distribution of values of that variable among all individuals described by the table.19
7203499897MeanThe arithmetic average. To find the mean of a set of observations, add their values and divide by the number of observations.20
7203499898MedianThe midpoint of a distribution, the number such that half the observations are smaller and the other half are larger. To find the median of a distribution: 1. Arrange all observation in order of size, from smallest to largest. 2. If the number of observations n is odd, the median M is the center observation in the ordered list. 3. If the number observations n is even, the median M is the average of the two center observations in the ordered list.21
7203499899ModeThe value or class in a statistical situation distribution having the greatest frequency22
7203499900MultimodalDescribes a graph of quantitative date with more than two clear peaks23
7203499901OutlierAn individual value that falls outside the overall pattern of a distribution24
7203499902Overall patternIn any graph of data, look for the overall pattern and for striking departures from that pattern. Shape, center, and spread describe the overall pattern of the distribution of a quantitative variable. The outlier is the departure.25
7203499903Pie chartShows the distribution of a categorical variable as a "pie" whose slices are sized by the counts or percents for the categories. A pie chart must include the categories that make up a whole.26
7203499904Quantitative VariableTakes numerical values for which it makes sense to find an average. Not all numbers are quantitative.27
7203499905RangeThe range of a set of quantitative data is the maximum value minus the minimum value. This is one number.28
7203499906Relative frequency tableShows the percents (relative frequencies) of observations in each category or class29
7203499907Resistant measureA statistic that is not affected very much by extreme observations. The median and IQR are resistant measures.30
7203499910Side by side bar graphUsed to compare the distribution of a categorical variable in each of several groups. For each value of the categorical variable, there is a bar corresponding to each group. The height of each bar is determined by the count or percent of individuals in the group with that value.31
7203499912SkewnessA distribution is skewed to the right if the right side of the graph (containing half of the observations with larger values) is much longer than the left side. It is skewed to the left if the left side of the graph is much longer than the right side.32
7203499913Splitting stemsA method for spreading out a stemplot that has two few stems33
7203499914Standard deviations sxMeasures the average distance of the observations from their mean. It is calculated by finding an average of the squared distances and then taking the square root. (Insert super long complicated equation). Sx is used for a sample standard deviation and Sigmax is used for a population standard deviation.34
7203499915StemplotA simple graphical display for fairly small data sets that gives a quick picture of the shape of a distribution while including the actual numerical values in the graph. Each observation is separated into a stem, consisting of all but the final digit, and a leaf, the final digit. The stems are arranged in a vertical column with the smallest at the top. Each leaf is written in the row to the right of its stem, with the leaves arranged in increasing order out from the stem35
7203499916SymmetryIf the right and left sides of a graph are approximately mirror images of each other.36
7203499917Third quartile Q3If the observations in a data set are ordered from lowest to highest, the third quartile Q3, is the median of the observations whose position is to the right of the median.37
7203499918Two-way tableA two-way table of counts organizes data about two categorical variables38
7203499919UnimodalDescribe a graph of quantitative data with a single peak39
7203499920VariablesAny characteristic of an individual. A variable can take different values for different individuals.40
7203499921Variance s^2xThe average squared distance of the observations in a data set from their mean. (Insert super long and complicated equation)41

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