Statistics 101 Discrete and Continuous Random Variables
Discrete Random Variable Has a countable number of possible values
Getting Good Grades An instructor of a large college course gives 15% of each A’s and D’s, 30% each B’s and C’s and 10% F’s. Student’s are grades on a four- point scale (A = 4).
Distribution of X: Grade01234 Probability
Question What is the probability that the student earned a B or better? Is this the sum of an A and a B?
Answer P(grade is 3 or 4)= P(3) + P(4) = = 0.45
Probability histograms for (a) random digits and (b) Benford’s law
Example 7.2 Tossing Coins Assumptions Balanced coin (Eric) Coin has no memory
X is the number of heads
Questions P(X=2) = (number of ways X=2)/16 = 6/16 P(X=0) P(X=1) P(X=3) P(X=4)
P(X=0) = 1/16 = P(X=1) = 4/16 = 0.25 P(X=3) = 4/16 = 0.25 P(X=4) = 1/16 =
Continuous random variables Takes all values in an interval of numbers Probability distribution – Described by a density curve
Random numbers and the uniform distribution (Ex:7.3 pg. 398)
Example 7.4 Drugs in Schools 1500 American Adults SRS N(0.3, ) What is the probability that the poll differs from the truth about the population by more than two percentage points?
Z-score
Read Example p 401 Exercises 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, 16, 19