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Chapter 1: Examining Distributions

Chapter 1: Examining Distributions. 1.1 Displaying Distributions with graphs.

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Chapter 1: Examining Distributions

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  1. Chapter 1: Examining Distributions

  2. 1.1 Displaying Distributions with graphs

  3. Many public health efforts are directed toward increasing levels of physical activity. “Physical Activity in Urban White, African American, and Mexican American Women” (Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise [1997]) reported on physical activity patterns in urban women. The accompanying data set given the preferred leisure-time physical activity for each of 30 Mexican American Women. The following coding is used; W=walking, T=weight training, C=cycling, G=gardening, A=aerobics. W T A W G T W W C W T W A T T W G W W C A W A W W W T W W T Construct what you think is an appropriate graph to display this information.

  4. The chronicle of Higher Education (August 31, 2001) reported graduation rates for NCAA Div. 1 schools. The rates reported are the % of full-time freshmen in fall 1993 who had earned a bachelor’s degree for August 1999.California: 64 41 44 31 37 73 72 68 35 37 81 90 82 74 79 67 66 66 70 63Texas: 67 21 32 88 35 71 39 35 71 63 12 46 35 39 28 65 25 24 22

  5. Individual Definition: Pg. 4-19 Variable Definition: Categorical Definition: Examples: Types of graphs used: Quantitative Definition: Examples Types of graphs used:

  6. Individual Definition: object described by a set of data Pg. 4-19 Variable Definition: characteristic of an individual Categorical Definition: placing into group or category Examples: gender, race, smoker, marital status Types of graphs used: bar graph; pie chart Quantitative Definition: Numerical values as a result of a measurement Examples: age, blood pressure, salary Types of graphs used: histogram, stemplot, time plot

  7. Bar Graph (pictograph) What does the height show? count or % Does graph need to include all categories? no Pg 8 #1.3 Pie Chart Shows? Visual for comparison with whole group Does graph need to include all categories? yes Pg 8 #1.4 Can we make a pie chart from data? Categorical Variable

  8. Histogram • Divide data into classes of equal width (5-15) • Count number in each class • Draw bar graph with no space between bars • Example: NCAA

  9. The chronicle of Higher Education (August 31, 2001) reported graduation rates for NCAA Div. 1 schools. The rates reported are the % of full-time freshmen in fall 1993 who had earned a bachelor’s degree for August 1999.California: 64 41 44 31 37 73 72 68 35 37 81 90 82 74 79 67 66 66 70 63Texas: 67 21 32 88 35 71 39 35 71 63 12 46 35 39 28 65 25 24 22

  10. Interpreting histograms • Look for overall pattern & striking deviations • Describe shape, center, and spread • Symmetric • Skewed to the right – right side extends much farther out than the left side

  11. Quantitative variable cont. • Stemplot • For small data sets • Quicker to make and presents more detailed info • Stem consists of all but final, rightmost digit, and leaf is the final digit • Example: NCAA • Time plot • To show a change over time • Example: pg 19 #1.10

  12. The chronicle of Higher Education (August 31, 2001) reported graduation rates for NCAA Div. 1 schools. The rates reported are the % of full-time freshmen in fall 1993 who had earned a bachelor’s degree for August 1999.California: 64 41 44 31 37 73 72 68 35 37 81 90 82 74 79 67 66 66 70 63Texas: 67 21 32 88 35 71 39 35 71 63 12 46 35 39 28 65 25 24 22

  13. What kind of graph would be appropriate? • Whether a spun penny lands “heads” or “tails” • The number of calories in a fast food sandwich • The life expectancy of a nation • The occupational background of a Civil War general • The weight of an automobile • For whom an American voted in the 1992 Presidential election • The age of a bride on her wedding day • The average low temperature in January for Appleton

  14. Misleading graphs

  15. In trying to make the graph more visually interesting by replacing the bars of a bar chart with milk buckets, areas are distorted.

  16. Another common distortion occurs when a third dimension is added to bar charts or pie charts. The 3-D version distorts the areas, and as a consequence, is much more difficult to interpret correctly.

  17. It is common to see scatterplots with broken axes, but be cautious of time plots, bar graphs, or histograms with broken axes. Broken axes in time plots can exaggerate the magnitude of change over time.

  18. In bar graphs and histograms, the vertical axis should never be broken. For example, by starting the vertical axis at 50 exaggerates the gain. The area for the rectangle representing 68 is more than three times the area of the rectangle representing 55.

  19. Watch out for unequal time spacing in time plots.

  20. Information from research studies is sometimes taken out of context. Think critically!

  21. What might be wrong with the following? • Only 3% of the men surveyed read cosmopolitan magazine. • Since most automobile accidents occur within 15 miles of a person’s residence, it is safer to make long trips. • A television commercial claims that “our razor blades are manufactured to such high standards that they will give you a shave that is 50% closer”. • A national health food magazine claims that “95% of its subscribers who follow the magazines recommendation and take megadoses of vitamin C are healthy and vigorous”. • During 1990 there were 234 accidents involving drunken drivers and 15,897 accidents involving drunken pedestrians reported in Danville. Can we conclude that it is safer in Danville to be a drunken driver than a drunken pedestrian?

  22. 1.2 Describing distributions with numbers

  23. Population – the entire group of individuals that we want information about • Sample – part of the population that we actually examine in order to gather information and make conclusions

  24. Mean • Measure of its center or average • µ used for population mean or

  25. Median • Midpoint of distribution • To find median: • Symmetrical distribution – mean and median are close together • Skewed distribution – the mean is farther out in the long tail than is the median

  26. Mode • Data that is repeated most often

  27. Quartiles • Spread of the middle half of data • To calculate • arrange data in ascending order and locate median • lower quartile (Q1) is the median of the low half of data • upper quartile (Q3) is the median of the upper half • Q1 is larger than 25% of data • Q2 is larger than 50% of data • Q3 is larger than 75% of data

  28. The chronicle of Higher Education (August 31, 2001) reported graduation rates for NCAA Div. 1 schools. The rates reported are the % of full-time freshmen in fall 1993 who had earned a bachelor’s degree for August 1999.California: 64 41 44 31 37 73 72 68 35 37 81 90 82 74 79 67 66 66 70 63Texas: 67 21 32 88 35 71 39 35 71 63 12 46 35 39 28 65 25 24 22

  29. 5 number summary and boxplot • 5 number summary – minimum, Q1, Q2, Q3, maximum • Boxplot – graph of 5 number summary • Best used for side-by-side comparison of more than one set of data • Include numerical scale in the graph

  30. Outliers • An unusually small or large data value • Calculate interquartile range (Q3 – Q1) • An observation is an outlier if it falls more than 1.5 times the IQR above Q3 or below Q1

  31. Standard Deviation • Measures spread by looking at how far the observations are from their mean • Variance formula: • Standard deviation formula: • s used for sample data; σ is used for population (equation is slightly different)

  32. Calculate the mean & standard deviation for each set of test scores

  33. Calculate the mean & standard deviation for each set of test scores

  34. Choosing a summary • The five number summary is used for describing a skewed distribution or a distribution with outliers • Use mean for reasonably symmetric distributions that are free of outliers

  35. 1.3 Normal Distributions Compact picture of the overall pattern of the data

  36. Density curve pg 46 & 47 Scores on national tests often have a regular distribution symmetrical partial area represents % of total “students” (observations) make total area under curve equal one

  37. Normal Distributions pg 51-52 • What are they? • Density curves that are symmetrical, single-peaked, and bell-shaped • Curve is described by its . . . • mean µ and standard deviation σ • Where is the mean located? • at the center of the curve • What controls how spread out the curve is? • Standard deviation controls the spread; the larger the σ the more spread out the data • Where is the σ on the curve? • at the points of change of curvature

  38. Why are normal curves important? • Good descriptions for some distributions of real data (scores on tests, measurements of same quantity, characteristics of biological populations) • Good approximations to the results of many kinds of chance outcomes (tossing coin, rolling die)

  39. 68-95-99.7 rule In a normal distribution: • 68% of the observations fall within 1 of the mean • 95% of the observations fall within 2 of the mean • 99.7% of the observations fall within 3 of the mean

  40. example: Light bulbs: x = 1600 hrs, s = 100 hr • 68% of light bulbs last: • 95% of light bulbs last: • 99.7% of light bulbs last:

  41. Standard normal curve • standardizing a normal curve is making all normal distributions the same • normal distribution with mean = 0 and standard deviation = 1 • z-score (# of standard deviations a value is away from the mean) • Formula: • any question about what proportion of observations lie in some range of values can be answered by finding the area under the curve (percentage)

  42. What % of the population has a z-score. . . • Less than -1.76 • Shaded area = .0392 or 3.92% • Less than 0.58 • Shaded area = .7190 or 71.90% • Greater than 1.96 • Lower area = .9750 so shaded area = .0250 or 2.50% • Between -1.76 and .58 • .7190 - .0392 = .6798 or 67.98%

  43. In a standard normal distribution, find the z-score that cuts off the • bottom 10% • .1003 is z = -1.28 • top 15% • .8508 is z = 1.04 .10 .85 .15

  44. If the probability of getting less than a certain z-value is .1190, what is the z-value? • z = -1.18 .1190

  45. If the probability of getting larger than a certain z-value is .0129, what is the z-value? • 1 - .0129 = .9871 • z = 2.23 .0129

  46. In a normal distribution µ=25 and =5. What is the probability of obtaining a value • greater than 30? • z = (30-25)/5 = 1 • 1-.8413 = .1587 or 15.87% • less than 15? • z = (15-25)/5 = -2 • .0228 or 2.28% • between 20 and 30? • z = -1 and z = 1 • .8413-.1587 = .6826 or 68.26% 30 15 20 30

  47. The Flatt Tire Corporation claims that the useful life of its tires is normally distributed with a mean life of 28,000 miles and with a standard deviation of 4000 miles. What percentage of the tires are expected to last more than 35,000 miles? • z = (35000-28000) / 4000 = 1.75 • 1 - .9599 = .0401 or 4.01% 35000

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