Parameter: A number describing a characteristic of the population (usually unknown) The mean gas price of regular gasoline for all gas stations in Maryland.

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Presentation transcript:

Parameter: A number describing a characteristic of the population (usually unknown) The mean gas price of regular gasoline for all gas stations in Maryland

The mean gas price in Maryland is $______ Statistic: A number describing a characteristic of a sample.

In Inferential Statistics we use the value of a sample statistic to estimate a parameter value.

We want to estimate the mean height of MC students. The mean height of MC students is 64 inches

Will x-bar be equal to mu? What if we get another sample, will x-bar be the same? How much does x-bar vary from sample to sample? By how much will x-bar differ from mu? How do we investigate the behavior of x-bar?

What does the x-bar distribution look like?

Graph the x-bar distribution, describe the shape and find the mean and standard deviation

Rolling a fair die and recording the outcome Simulation randInt(1,6) Press MATH Go to PRB Select 5: randInt(1,6)

Rolling a die n times and finding the mean of the outcomes. Mean(randInt(1,6,10) Press 2 nd STAT[list] Right to MATH Select 3:mean( Press MATH Right to PRB 5:randInt( Let n = 2 and think on the range of the x-bar distribution What if n is 10? Think on the range

Rolling a die n times and finding the mean of the outcomes. The Central Limit Theorem in action

For the larger sample sizes, most of the x-bar values are quite close to the mean of the parent population mu. (Theoretical distribution in this case) This is the effect of averaging When n is small, a single unusual x value can result in an x-bar value far from the center With a larger sample size, any unusual x values, when averaged with the other sample values, still tend to yield an x-bar value close to mu. AGAIN, an x-bar based on a large will tends to be closer to mu than will an x-bar based on a small sample. This is why the shape of the x-bar distribution becomes more bell shaped as the sample size gets larger.

Normal Distributions

The Central Limit Theorem in action Closing stock prices ($) Variability of sample means for samples of size – *2.5 __|________|________|________X________|________|________|__

Closing stock prices ($) Variability of sample means for samples of size % | 95% | 2.5% 26 – *2.5 __|________|________|________X________|________|________|__ About 99.7% of samples of 64 closing stock prices have means that are within $7.50 of the population mean mu About 95% of samples of 64 closing stock prices have means that are within $5 of the population mean mu

We want to estimate the mean closing price of stocks by using a SRS of 64 stocks. Assume the standard deviation σ = $20. X ~Right Skewed (μ = ?, σ = 20) __|________|________|________X________|________|________|__ μ-7.5 μ-5 μ-2.5 μ μ+2.5 μ+5 μ+7.5 We’ll be 95% confident that our estimate is within $5 from the population mean mu We’ll be 99.7% confident that our estimate is within $7.50 from the population mean mu

Simulation Roll a die 5 times and record the number of ONES obtained: randInt(1,6,5) Press MATH Go to PRB Select 5: randInt(1,6,5)

Roll a die 5 times, record the number of ONES obtained. Do the process n times and find the mean number of ONES obtained. The Central Limit Theorem in action

Use website APPLETS to simulate proportion problems