Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Normal Distribution as an Approximation to the Binomial Distribution Section 5-6.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Normal Approximations to Binomial Distributions Larson/Farber 4th ed1.
Advertisements

Section Copyright © 2014, 2012, 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition and the Triola Statistics Series.
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Section 7.4 Approximating the Binomial Distribution Using the Normal Distribution HAWKES LEARNING SYSTEMS math courseware specialists Copyright © 2008.
Normal Probability Distributions
Slide 1 Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.  Continuous random variable  Normal distribution Overview Figure 5-1 Formula 5-1 LAPTOP3: f(x) = 
Slide Slide 1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley. Section 6-6 Normal as Approximation to Binomial Created by.
Chapter 4 Probability Distributions
Definitions Uniform Distribution is a probability distribution in which the continuous random variable values are spread evenly over the range of possibilities;
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola Statistics Series by.
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola Statistics Series by.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc..
Normal Probability Distributions Chapter 5. § 5.1 Introduction to Normal Distributions and the Standard Distribution.
Normal and Sampling Distributions A normal distribution is uniquely determined by its mean, , and variance,  2 The random variable Z = (X-  /  is.
Section Copyright © 2014, 2012, 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition and the Triola Statistics Series.
© Copyright McGraw-Hill CHAPTER 6 The Normal Distribution.
HAWKES LEARNING SYSTEMS math courseware specialists Copyright © 2010 by Hawkes Learning Systems/Quant Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Continuous.
Normal Approximation Of The Binomial Distribution:
Section 5.5 Normal Approximations to Binomial Distributions Larson/Farber 4th ed.
Section Copyright © 2014, 2012, 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition and the Triola Statistics Series.
Bluman, Chapter 61. Review the following from Chapter 5 A surgical procedure has an 85% chance of success and a doctor performs the procedure on 10 patients,
Slide 1 Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc..
Section Copyright © 2014, 2012, 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition and the Triola Statistics Series.
1 Chapter 6. Section 6-1 and 6-2. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION.
1 Chapter 5. Section 5-1 and 5-2. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION.
1 Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 6. Continuous Random Variables Reminder: Continuous random variable.
Chapter 6 Normal Probability Distributions 6-1 Overview 6-2 The Standard Normal Distribution 6-3 Applications of Normal Distributions 6-4 Sampling Distributions.
Statistics Workshop Tutorial 8 Normal Distributions.
Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Binomial Experiments Section 4-3 & Section 4-4 M A R I O F. T R I O L A Copyright.
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola.
Slide Slide 1 Section 6-6 Normal as Approximation to Binomial.
Normal Probability Distributions Chapter 5. § 5.1 Introduction to Normal Distributions and the Standard Distribution.
1 Chapter 4. Section 4-3. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION E LEMENTARY.
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Statistics Section 5-6 Normal as Approximation to Binomial.
© 2005 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. 5-1 Statistics A First Course Donald H. Sanders Robert K. Smidt Aminmohamed Adatia Glenn A. Larson.
Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Testing a Claim about a Proportion Section 7-5 M A R I O F. T R I O L A Copyright.
1 Chapter 5. Section 5-1 and 5-2. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION.
1 Chapter 5. Section 5-5. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION E LEMENTARY.
1 Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 6 Continuous Random Variables.
1 Chapter 4. Section 4-3. Triola, Elementary Statistics, Eighth Edition. Copyright Addison Wesley Longman M ARIO F. T RIOLA E IGHTH E DITION E LEMENTARY.
Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Estimates and Sample Sizes Chapter 6 M A R I O F. T R I O L A Copyright © 1998,
Normal Approximations to Binomial Distributions.  For a binomial distribution:  n = the number of independent trials  p = the probability of success.
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola Statistics Series by.
Copyright © 2015, 2012, and 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Chapter Normal Probability Distributions 5.
Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Nonstandard Normal Distributions: Finding Probabilities Section 5-3 M A R I O.
Copyright© 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics by Addison Wesley Longman 1 Testing a Claim about a Mean: Large Samples Section 7-3 M A R I O F. T R I O.
Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Probability Distributions Chapter 4 M A R I O F. T R I O L A Copyright © 1998,
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition and the Triola Statistics Series by.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 6 Normal Probability Distributions 6-1 Overview 6-2 The Standard Normal Distribution 6-3 Applications.
Chapter 6 Normal Approximation to Binomial Lecture 4 Section: 6.6.
Central Limit Theorem Section 5-5
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Chapter 5 Normal Probability Distributions.
Distributions Chapter 5
Chapter 6. Continuous Random Variables
Normal as Approximation to Binomial
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Eleventh Edition
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Tenth Edition
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Elementary Statistics
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Normal Probability Distributions
Section 6-1 Review and Preview.
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
Chapter 5 Normal Probability Distributions.
Normal as Approximation to Binomial
Lecture Slides Essentials of Statistics 5th Edition
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 1 Normal Distribution as an Approximation to the Binomial Distribution Section 5-6 M A R I O F. T R I O L A Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 2 Review Binomial Probability Distribution  applies to a discrete random variable  has these requirements: 1. The experiment must have fixed number of trials. 2. The trials must be independent. 3. Each trial must have all outcomes classified into two categories. 4.The probabilities must remain constant for each trial.  solve by P( x ) formula, computer software, or Table A-1

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 3 Approximate a Binomial Distribution with a Normal Distribution if: 1. np  5 2. nq  5

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 4 Approximate a Binomial Distribution with a Normal Distribution if: 1. np  5 2. nq  5 distribution. (normal) Then µ = np and  = npq and the random variable has a

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 5 Figure 5-24 Solving Binomial Probability Problems Using a Normal Approximation

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 6 Figure 5-24 Solving Binomial Probability Problems Using a Normal Approximation After verifying that we have a binomial probability problem, identify n, p, q Is Computer Software Available ? Can the problem be solved by using Table A-1 ? Can the problem be easily solved with the binomial probability formula ? Use the Computer Software Use the Table A-1 Use binomial probability formula Yes No Start P( x ) = p x q (n – x ) !x! n!n! n– x

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 7 Figure 5-24 Solving Binomial Probability Problems Using a Normal Approximation Can the problem be easily solved with the binomial probability formula ? Use binomial probability formula Yes P( x ) = p x q (n – x ) !x! n!n! Are np  5 and nq  5 both true ? No Yes Compute µ = np and  =  npq Draw the normal curve, and identify the region representing the probability to be found. Be sure to include the continuity correction. (Remember, the discrete value x is adjusted for continuity by adding and subtracting 0.5) n– x

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 8 Figure 5-24 Solving Binomial Probability Problems Using a Normal Approximation Draw the normal curve, and identify the region representing the probability to be found. Be sure to include the continuity correction. (Remember, the discrete value x is adjusted for continuity by adding and subtracting 0.5) Calculate where µ and  are the values already found and x is adjusted for continuity. z = x – µ  Refer to Table A-2 to find the area between µ and the value of x adjusted for continuity. Use that area to determine the probability being sought.

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 9 Continuity Corrections Procedures 1. When using the normal distribution as an approximation to the binomial distribution, always use the continuity correction. 2. In using the continuity correction, first identify the discrete whole number x that is relevant to the binomial probability problem. 3. Draw a normal distribution centered about µ, then draw a vertical strip area centered over x. Mark the left side of the strip with the number x  0.5, and mark the right side with x For x = 64, draw a strip from 63.5 to Consider the area of the strip to represent the probability of discrete number x. continued

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 10 Continuity Corrections Procedures 4. Now determine whether the value of x itself should be included in the probability you want. Next, determine whether you want the probability of at least x, at most x, more than x, fewer than x, or exactly x. Shade the area to the right of left of the strip, as appropriate; also shade the interior of the strip itself if and only if x itself is to be included, The total shaded region corresponds to probability being sought. continued

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 11 x = at least 64 = 64, 65, 66,

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 12 x = at least 64 = 64, 65, 66, x = more than 64 = 65, 66, 67,

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 13 x = at least 64 = 64, 65, 66, x = more than 64 = 65, 66, 67,... x = at most 64 = 0, 1,... 62, 63,

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 14 x = at least 64 = 64, 65, 66, x = more than 64 = 65, 66, 67,... x = at most 64 = 0, 1,... 62, 63, 64 x = fewer than 64 = 0, 1,... 62,

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 15 x = exactly 64

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman x = exactly 64

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 17 Interval represents discrete number x = exactly 64

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 18 Chapter 5 Normal Probability Distributions 5-1 Overview 5-2 The Standard Normal Distribution 5-3 & 5-4 Nonstandard Normal Distributions ( Finding Probabilities & Finding Scores) 5-5The Central Limit Theorem 5-6 Normal Distributions as Approximation to Binomial Distribution

Copyright © 1998, Triola, Elementary Statistics Addison Wesley Longman 19 Basic Concepts Continuous distribution/Density curve Uniform distribution Normal distribution –Standard normal distribution Central Limit Theorem (Approx. normal distr.) –Distribution of sample mean mean, variance, standard deviation (standard error) –finite population correction factor –continuity correction (Binomial distribution)