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Published byGarey Fleming Modified over 8 years ago
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Displaying and Describing Categorical Data Chapter 3
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Terms Frequency table: Categories and counts Distribution: lists the frequencies of each category Distribution: lists the relative frequencies of each category Contingency Table: The frequencies or relative frequencies of a chart.
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Terms Marginal Distribution: the totals found on the margins of the chart Conditional distribution: the distribution of one row or column of a contingency table. Independence: two variables are independent if the conditional distribution of one variable is the same as the conditional distribution of the other
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Three Rules of Data Analysis First, make a picture!
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Or you could
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Why? Pictures reveal things charts don’t. Patterns can be revealed that are not readily apparent from the numbers. Pictures are the easiest way to explain to others about the data
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To Make a Graph Make piles. Organize the data into like groups Make a frequency table Make a relative frequency table by finding the percentages
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Make a Graph Probably a bar chart graphing the frequencies or... A pie chart to graph the relative frequencies Beware of the area principle. Stay 2-D
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To Make a Graph of Categorical Data ThInk Check W’s Identify the variables Check to see if categories overlap Data are counts
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To Make a Graph of Categorical Data Show Select the appropriate graph to compare categories Bar Graph for frequencies Pie Chart for relative frequencies (percents) Stacked bar graph can be used instead of a pie chart
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To Make a Graph of Categorical Data Tell Interpret the results Describe the results in the context of the problem Answers are sentences not numbers
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