1 / 56

Chapter 9: Normal Distribution

Chapter 9: Normal Distribution. Motivating Example. Pizza Pit* Delivery They have a 30 minute “or it’s free” delivery guarantee The manager wants to know how often they can expect to give away free pizzas. *Pizza Pit is an actual restaurant in Ames, Iowa.

traci
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 9: Normal Distribution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9:Normal Distribution

  2. Motivating Example • Pizza Pit* Delivery • They have a 30 minute “or it’s free” delivery guarantee • The manager wants to know how often they can expect to give away free pizzas *Pizza Pit is an actual restaurant in Ames, Iowa. Logo is taken from http://www.pizzapitames.com/pizzapit/

  3. Motivating Example: Historical Data • Pizza Pit has been in operation for 20 years • The owner has kept track of the amount of time required for every delivery ever made • The owner creates a histogram (Figure 1, next slide) • The distribution is symmetric • The mean, median, and mode are 25 minutes • The standard deviation is 5 minutes

  4. Motivating Example: Histogram Figure 1. Histogram for Pizza Pit Delivery Times

  5. The owner creates a frequency polygon (Figure 2) based on the histogram, which he recognizes as a normal distribution Motivating Example: Frequency Polygon Figure 2. Frequency Polygon for Pizza Pit Delivery Times

  6. Normal Distribution Properties • Shape: Bell-shaped frequency polygon • Central Tendency: The mean, median, and mode coincide at the middle of the distribution • Symmetric: Half the cases fall above, and half fall below, the mean • Population Distribution: The distribution is based on a population

  7. Normal Distribution Properties • Mean and Standard Deviation: The normal distribution is characterized by two numbers • Mean, μ (mu – what a kitty says) • Standard Deviation, σ (sigma) • The Symbols Have Changed?!? Before we used the symbols and S for the mean and standard deviation • These represent characteristics of a sample • The normal distribution is based on the population • Importance of the Normal Distribution • The “normality assumption” is an important part of inferential statistics (we will cover this later in the semester) • It is also encountered in everyday life (“grading on a curve”)

  8. Normal Distribution Properties • How Do We Get μ and σ? • Textbook examples are often made up • Information might be available from a population (e.g., Census) • Historical data • Information from a sample is used to provide an estimate of μ and σ • Bottom Line: In this course, you will be given μ and σ

  9. Area Under the Normal Curve • The area under the normal curve between two values of a variable represents 3 things • Probability: The probability of being between the two values in the population • Proportion: The proportion of the population between the two values • Percent: When the probability or proportion is multiplied by 100, it represents the percent of the population between the two values

  10. Area Under the Normal Curve • Area Under the Entire Curve • Area, proportion, or probability is 1 • Percent is 100% • Area Above the Mean • Area, proportion, or probability is 0.50 • Percent is 50% • Area Below the Mean • Area, proportion, or probability is 0.50 • Percent is 50%

  11. Special Percentages • 68.26% of the cases are within 1 standard deviation of the mean (μ ± 1σ) • 34.13% are between the mean and 1 standard deviation above the mean • 34.13% are between the mean and 1 standard deviation below the mean • 95.46% of the cases are within 2 standard deviations of the mean (μ ± 2σ) • 99.72% of the cases are within 3 standard deviations of the mean (μ ± 3σ)

  12. Area Under the Normal Curve 99.72% 95.46% 68.26% 2.13% 13.60% 34.13% 34.13% 13.60% 2.13% -3σ-2σ -1σμ +1σ+2σ +3σ

  13. Pizza Pit Example: What Do We Know So Far? • Recall: Mean μ = 25 and standard deviation σ = 5 • 50% of the delivery times were more than 25 minutes • The probability that any given delivery will be more than 25 minutes is 0.50 • The proportion of delivery times more than 25 minutes is 0.50 • 50% of the delivery times were less than 25 minutes • The probability that any given delivery will be less than 25 minutes is 0.50 • The proportion of delivery times less than 25 minutes is 0.50

  14. Pizza Pit Example: What Do We Know So Far? • 68.26% of delivery times were between 20 and 30 minutes (within 1 standard deviation of the mean) • 34.13% of delivery times were between 20 and 25 minutes • 34.13% of delivery times were between 25 and 30 minutes • 95.46% of delivery times were between 15 and 35 minutes (within 2 standard deviations of the mean) • 99.72% of delivery times were between 10 and 40 minutes (within 3 standard deviations of the mean)

  15. Definition: The number of standard deviations that a given value of a variable is above or below the mean A negative sign indicates a value below the mean A positive sign indicates a value above the mean Computation: Y = Value of a variable μ = Mean of the variable σ = Standard deviation of the variable Z-Scores

  16. Z-Scores: Application to Pizza Pit Example • Z-score for a delivery time of 30 minutes? • Calculation: • Interpretation: 30 minutes is 1 standard deviation above the mean • Z-score for a delivery time of 18 minutes? • Calculation: • Interpretation: 18 minutes is 1.4 standard deviations below the mean • Z-score for a delivery time of 25 minutes? • Calculation: • Interpretation: 25 minutes is the mean

  17. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Pregnancy Duration: Number of days from time of conception to time of birth has a normal distribution with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days • Question 1: Calculateand interpret the z-scores for women having the following pregnancy durations: • Rachael was pregnant for 266 days. • Monica was pregnant for 300 days. • Phoebe was pregnant for 255 days.

  18. Comparisons Using Z-Scores • “Common Scale”: Z-scores place everybody on a “common scale” called standard deviation units • Comparisons: Z-scores can be used to compare people on variables having different ranges of values and/or means and standard deviations • Restriction: This only applies to variables having a normal distribution

  19. Comparing Relative Performance on Exams • Cindy • The Soc 4880 final exam in Spring 2006 was worth 75 points • The scores in class had a normal distribution • The mean μ = 56 • The standard deviation σ = 6 • Cindy earned 70 points • Bobby • The Soc 4880 final exam in Fall 2006 was worth 100 points • The scores in class had a normal distribution • The mean μ = 75 • The standard deviation σ = 9 • Bobby earned 70 points

  20. Comparing Relative Performance on Exams • Who Did Better? If we know the means, standard deviations, and can assume a normal distribution, then comparisons can be made using z-scores • Cindy: • Bobby: • Conclusion? • Cindy was 2.33 standard deviations above the mean while Bobby was 0.56 standard deviations below the mean • Cindy did better than Bobby

  21. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Question 2: Karla has been pregnant for 254 days and Garkel, a Yarkian woman, has been pregnant for 360 days (a) Calculate the z-score for Karla’s pregnancy. (Earth women have a normally-distributed pregnancy duration with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days.) (b) Compute the z-score for Garkel’s pregnancy. (Yarkian women have a normally-distributed pregnancy duration with mean μ = 412 days and standard deviation σ = 24 days.) (c) Use the z-scores from parts (a) and (b) to decide whether Karla or Garkel is further along in her pregnancy.

  22. Standard Normal Table (Appendix B) • Column A: Lists z-scores from 0 to +4 • The standard normal is symmetric • Proportions for positive values are the same as proportions for negative values • Column B: Lists the proportion of cases between the mean and z-score listed in Column A • When the z-score is positive, the proportion is to the right • When the z-score is negative, the proportion is to the left • Column C: Lists the proportion of cases beyond the z-score listed in Column A • When the z-score is positive, the proportion is to the right • When the z-score is negative, the proportion is to the left

  23. Standard Normal Table (Appendix B)

  24. Standard Normal Table (Appendix B) • How Will We Use Appendix B?: To find proportions, probabilities, and percentages between values of a variable • Pizza Pit Example • Let Y represent values of the variable (delivery time) • Recall that μ = 25 and σ = 5

  25. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBetween Mean and Positive Z-Score • Question: What is the probability that a delivery time will be between 25 and 33 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 33 to a z-score: • Look up 1.60 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column B: 0.4452 • The probability is 0.4452 that a delivery time will be between 25 and 33 minutes

  26. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBetween Mean and Positive Z-Score

  27. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBetween Mean and Negative Z-Score • Question: What percentage of delivery times are between 10 and 25 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 10 to a z-score: • Look up 3.00 (ignore the negative sign) in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column B: 0.4986 • 49.86% of delivery times are between 10 and 25 minutes

  28. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBetween Mean and Negative Z-Score

  29. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Pregnancy duration has a normal distribution with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days • Question 3: Calculate the percent of pregnancies that have a duration between 266 and 270 days • Question 4: Compute the proportion of pregnancies that have a duration between 220 and 266 days

  30. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Between Two Z-Scores on Opposite Sides of the Mean • Question: What proportion of delivery times are between 22 and 27 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 22 and 27 to z-scores: • Look up 0.60 and 0.40 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column B: 0.2257 and 0.1554 • Add the values (0.2257 + 0.1554) to get .3811 • The proportion of delivery times between 22 and 27 minutes is 0.3811

  31. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Between Two Z-Scores on Opposite Sides of the Mean

  32. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Between Two Z-Scores on the Same Side of the Mean • Question: What is the probability that a delivery time will be between 15 and 20 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 15 and 20 to z-scores: • Look up 2.00 and 1.00 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column B: 0.4772 and 0.3413 • Subtract the smaller value from the larger value (.4772 - .3413) to get 0.1359 • The probability is 0.1359 that a delivery time will be between 15 and 20 minutes

  33. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Between Two Z-Scores on the Same Side of the Mean

  34. Summary of Rules (So Far…)

  35. Summary of Rules (So Far…)

  36. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Pregnancy duration has a normal distribution with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days • Question 5: My mother-in-law Phyllis (a maternity nurse) claims that most births occur between 252 and 273 days. Determine the percent of pregnancies with durations between 252 and 273 days, and explain how I should response to Phyllis’ claim. • Question 6: Calculate the probability that a pregnancy will have a duration between 269 and 292 days.

  37. Proportion/Probability/PercentageAbove a Positive Z-Score • Question: What percentage of deliveries take more than 30 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 30 to a z-score: • Look up 1.00 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column C: 0.1587 • 15.87% of deliveries take more than 30 minutes

  38. Proportion/Probability/PercentageAbove a Positive Z-Score

  39. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Above a Positive Z-Score: Special Example • Question: A customer complains that it took 45 minutes for a delivery. How likely does this seem? • Procedure • Convert 45 to a z-score: • Look up 4.00 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column C: <0.0001 • This does not seem very likely (the probably is less than 0.0001). Either the customer is wrong or the delivery person was having a bad day

  40. Proportion/Probability/Percentage Above a Positive Z-Score: Special Example

  41. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBelow a Negative Z-Score • Question: What proportion of delivery times are less than 13 minutes? • Procedure • Convert 13 to a z-score: • Look up 2.40 in Column A of Appendix B • Read across to Column C: 0.0082 • The proportion of delivery times less than 13 minutes is 0.0082

  42. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBelow a Negative Z-Score

  43. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Pregnancy duration has a normal distribution with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days • Question 7: In an article published in the National Inquirer, Kathleen claims to have been pregnant for 365 days. How likely does this seem? • Question 8: Births prior to 252 days are considered premature. Compute the percent of births that are premature.

  44. Question: What is the probability that a delivery will take less than 37 minutes? Procedure Convert 37 to a z-score: Look up 2.40 in Column A of Appendix B Add 0.50 to the value in Column B (0.4918): 0.4918 + 0.50 = 0.9918 OR subtract the value in Column C (0.0082) from 1: 1-0.0082 = 0.9918 The probability that a delivery will take less than 37 minutes is 0.9918 Proportion/Probability/PercentageBelow a Positive Z-Score

  45. Proportion/Probability/PercentageBelow a Positive Z-Score

  46. Question: What percentage of delivery times are more than 24 minutes? Procedure Convert 24 to a z-score: Look up 0.20 in Column A of Appendix B Add 0.50 to the value in Column B (0.0793): 0.0793 + 0.50 = 0.5793 OR subtract the value in Column C (0.4207) from 1: 1-0.4207 = 0.5793 57.93% of delivery times are more than 24 minutes Proportion/Probability/PercentageAbove a Negative Z-Score

  47. Proportion/Probability/PercentageAbove a Negative Z-Score

  48. Summary of Additional Rules

  49. Summary of Additional Rules

  50. In-Class Exercise: Pregnancy • Pregnancy duration has a normal distribution with mean μ = 266 days and standard deviation σ = 16 days • Question 9: Determine the proportion of pregnancies that are more than 250 days • Question 10: Compute the percent of pregnancies that are less than 280 days

More Related