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Confidence Intervals I 2/1/12 Correlation (continued) Population parameter versus sample statistic Uncertainty in estimates Sampling distribution Confidence.

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Presentation on theme: "Confidence Intervals I 2/1/12 Correlation (continued) Population parameter versus sample statistic Uncertainty in estimates Sampling distribution Confidence."— Presentation transcript:

1 Confidence Intervals I 2/1/12 Correlation (continued) Population parameter versus sample statistic Uncertainty in estimates Sampling distribution Confidence interval Section 3.1 Professor Kari Lock Morgan Duke University

2 Correlation Guessing Game http://istics.net/gett/gcstart.php?group_id=duke Highest scorer in the class gets one extra point on the first exam!

3 Correlation r = 0.43 NFL Teams

4 Correlation Same plot, but with Dolphins and Raiders (outliers) removed r = 0.08

5 Human Cannonball Y X Plot Y vs. X What is the correlation between X and Y? (a) r > 0 (b) r < 0 (c) r = 0 Are X and Y associated? (a) Yes (b) No

6 Correlation Cautions 1.Correlation can be heavily affected by outliers. Always plot your data! 2. r = 0 means no linear association. The variables could still be otherwise associated. Always plot your data! 3.Correlation does not imply causation!

7 Summary: Two Quantitative Variables Summary Statistics – Correlation Visualization – Scatterplot

8 Variable(s)VisualizationSummary Statistics Categoricalbar chart, pie chart frequency table, relative frequency table, proportion Quantitativedotplot, histogram, boxplot mean, median, max, min, standard deviation, range, IQR, five number summary Categorical vs Categorical side-by-side bar chart, segmented bar chart, mosaic plot two-way table, difference in proportions Quantitative vs Categorical side-by-side boxplotsstatistics by group Quantitative vs Quantitative scatterplotcorrelation

9 The Big Picture Population Sample Sampling Statistical Inference

10 Parameter vs Statistic A sample statistic is a number computed from sample data. A population parameter is a number that describes some aspect of a population We usually have a sample statistic and want to make inferences about the population parameter

11 The Big Picture Population Sample Sampling Statistical Inference PARAMETERS STATISTICS

12 Parameter vs Statistic mu sigma rho beta

13 Obama’s Approval Rating Gallup surveyed 1500 Americans between Jan 28-30, 2012, and 46% of these people approve of the job Barack Obama is doing as president What do you think is the true proportion of Americans who approve of the job Barack Obama is doing as president? http://www.gallup.com/poll/113980/Gallup-Daily-Obama-Job-Approval.aspx

14 Point and Interval Estimates The sample statistic gives a point estimate of the population parameter (a single number) Usually, it is more useful to provide an interval estimate which gives a range of plausible values for the population parameter: How do we determine the margin of error???

15 Obama

16 Obama’s Approval Rating Between 43% and 49% of Americans currently approve of the job Obama is doing as president

17 IMPORTANT POINTS Sample statistics vary from sample to sample. (they will not match the parameter exactly) KEY QUESTION: For a given sample statistic, what are plausible values for the population parameter? How much uncertainty surrounds the sample statistic? KEY ANSWER: It depends on how much the statistic varies from sample to sample!

18 Reese’s Pieces What proportion of Reese’s pieces are orange? Take a random sample of 10 Reese’s pieces What is your sample proportion?  class dotplot Give a range of plausible values for the population proportion

19 Sampling Distribution A sampling distribution is the distribution of statistics computed for different samples of the same size taken from the same population The sampling distribution shows us how the statistic varies from sample to sample We can use the spread of the sampling distribution to determine the margin of error for a statistic

20 Sampling Distribution In the Reese’s pieces sampling distribution, what does each dot represent? a)One Reese’s piece b)One sample statistic

21 Sampling Distribution The higher the standard deviation of the sampling distribution, the (a) higher (b) lower the margin of error

22 Sample Size For a larger sample size you get less variability in the statistics, so less uncertainty in your estimate n = 10 n = 50 n = 100 http://www.rossmanchance.com/applets/Reeses/ReesesPieces.html

23 Sampling Distribution A sampling distribution is the distribution of statistics computed for different samples of the same size taken from the same population The sampling distribution shows us how the statistic varies from sample to sample This gives us an idea for the uncertainty surrounding the estimate of a parameter

24 Random Samples If you take random samples, the sampling distribution will be centered around the true population parameter If sampling bias exists (if you do not take random samples), your sampling distribution may give you bad information about the true parameter

25 Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address

26 Confidence Interval A confidence interval for a parameter is an interval computed from sample data by a method that will capture the parameter for a specified proportion of all samples The success rate (the proportion of all samples whose intervals contain the parameter) is known as the confidence level A 95% confidence interval will contain the true parameter for 95% of all samples

27 Confidence Intervals http://bcs.whfreeman.com/ips4e/cat_010/applets/confidenceinterval.html The parameter is fixed The statistic is random (depends on the sample) The interval is random (depends on the sample) Parameter Sampling Distribution

28 If you had access to the sampling distribution, how would you find the margin of error to ensure that intervals of the form would capture the parameter for 95% of all samples? Sampling Distribution

29 The standard error (SE) of a statistic is the standard deviation of the sample statistic A 95% confidence interval can be created by Standard Error http://bcs.whfreeman.com/ips4e/cat_010/applets/confidenceinterval.html

30 Economy A recent survey of 1,502 Americans in January 2012 found that 86% consider the economy a “top priority” for the president and congress this year. The standard error for this statistic is 0.01. What is the 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of all Americans that consider the economy a “top priority” for the president and congress this year? (a) (0.85, 0.87) (b) (0.84, 0.88) (c) (0.82, 0.90) http://www.people-press.org/2012/01/23/public-priorities-deficit-rising-terrorism- slipping/

31 Summary To create a plausible range of values for a parameter: Take many random samples from the population, and compute the sample statistic for each sample Compute the standard error as the standard deviation of all these statistics Use statistic  2  SE One small problem…

32 Reality … WE ONLY HAVE ONE SAMPLE!!!! How do we know how much sample statistics vary, if we only have one sample?!? … to be continued

33 Project 1 Pose a question that you would like to investigate. If possible, choose something related to your major! Find or collect data that will help you answer this question (you may need to edit your question based on available data) – If using existing data, you have to find your own (do not use a dataset already used in this class) – If collecting data, wait until your proposal has been approved to collect the data You can choose either a single variable or a relationship between two variables

34 Project 1 The result will be a five page paper including – Description of the data collection method, and the implications this has for statistical inference – Descriptive statistics (summary stats, visualization) – Confidence intervals – Hypothesis testing (following week) – Distribution-based inference (after Exam 1) Proposal due 2/15 – Can submit earlier if want feedback sooner – Include data if you are using existing data – If collecting your own data, proposal should include a detailed data collection plan

35 To Do Homework 2 (due Monday) Idea and data for Project 1 (proposal due 2/15)

36 FINDING DATA http://library.duke.edu/data/ Joel Herndon


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