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A Broad Overview of Key Statistical Concepts. An Overview of Our Review Populations and samples Parameters and statistics Confidence intervals Hypothesis.

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Presentation on theme: "A Broad Overview of Key Statistical Concepts. An Overview of Our Review Populations and samples Parameters and statistics Confidence intervals Hypothesis."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Broad Overview of Key Statistical Concepts

2 An Overview of Our Review Populations and samples Parameters and statistics Confidence intervals Hypothesis testing

3 Populations and Samples … and Parameters and Statistics

4 Populations and Parameters A population is any large collection of objects or individuals, such as people, students, or trees about which information is desired. A parameter is any summary number, like an average or percentage, that describes the entire population.

5 Parameters Examples include population mean , the population variance  2 and population proportion p. 99.999999999999….% of the time, we don’t (...or can’t) know the real value of a population parameter. Best we can do is estimate the parameter!

6 Samples and Statistics A sample is a representative group drawn from the population. A statistic is any summary number, like an average or percentage, that describes the sample.

7 Statistics Examples include the sample mean , and the sample variance s 2, and the sample proportion (“p-hat”) Because samples are manageable in size, we can determine the value of statistics. We use the known statistic to learn about the unknown parameter.

8 Example: Smoking at PSU? Population of 42,000 PSU students What proportion smoke regularly? Sample of 987 PSU students 43% reported smoking regularly

9 Example: Grade inflation? Population of 5 million college students Is the average GPA 2.7? Sample of 100 college students How likely is it that 100 students would have an average GPA as large as 2.9 if the population average was 2.7?

10 Two ways to learn about a population parameter Confidence intervals estimate parameters. –We can be 95% confident that the proportion of Penn State students who have a tattoo is between 5.1% and 15.3%. Hypothesis tests test the value of parameters. –There is enough statistical evidence to conclude that the mean normal body temperature of adults is lower than 98.6 degrees F.

11 Confidence Intervals A Review of Concepts

12 The situation Want to estimate the actual population mean . But can only get , the sample mean. Find a range of values, L <  < U, that we can be really confident contains . This range of values is called a “confidence interval.”

13 Confidence Intervals for Proportions in Newspapers ABC News Poll, May 16-20, 2001 69% of 1,027 U.S. adults think using a hand-held cell phone while driving a car should be illegal The “margin of error” is 3%. The “confidence interval” is 69% ± 3%. We can be really confident that between 66% and 72% of all U.S. adults think using a hand-held cell phone while driving a car should be illegal.

14 General Form of Most Confidence Intervals Sample estimate ± margin of error Lower limit L = estimate - margin of error Upper limit U = estimate + margin of error Then, we’re confident that the population value is somewhere between L and U.

15 T-interval for Mean  Formula in notation: Formula in English: Sample mean ± (t × estimated standard error) where “t” comes from the t distribution, and depends on the confidence level  and the sample size through the degrees of freedom “n-1”.

16 Length of Confidence Interval Want confidence interval to be as narrow as possible. Length = Upper Limit - Lower Limit

17 How length of CI is affected? As sample mean increases… As the standard deviation decreases… As we decrease the confidence level… As we increase sample size …

18 T-Interval for Mean in Minitab One-Sample T: TEMP Variable N Mean StDev SE Mean 95.0% CI TEMP 130 98.27 0.778 0.0682 (98.14,98.41 ) We can be 95% confident that the average normal body temperature of adults is between 98.1 and 98.4 degrees Fahrenheit.

19 Hypothesis Testing A Review of Concepts

20 General Idea of Hypothesis Testing Make an initial assumption. Collect evidence (data). Based on the available evidence, decide whether or not the initial assumption is reasonable.

21 Example: Normal Body Temperature Population of many, many adults Is average adult body temperature 98.6 degrees? Or is it lower? Sample of 130 adults Average body temperature of 130 sampled adults is 98.25 degrees.

22 Making the Decision It is either likely or unlikely that we would collect the evidence we did given the initial assumption. (Note: “Likely” or “unlikely” is measured by calculating a probability!) If it is likely, then we “do not reject” our initial assumption. There is not enough evidence to do otherwise.

23 Making the Decision (cont’d) If it is unlikely, then: –either our initial assumption is correct and we experienced an unusual event –or our initial assumption is incorrect In statistics, if it is unlikely, we decide to “reject” our initial assumption.

24 Idea of Hypothesis Testing: Criminal Trial Analogy First, state 2 hypotheses, the null hypothesis (“H 0 ”) and the alternative hypothesis (“H A ”) –H 0 : Defendant is not guilty. –H A : Defendant is guilty.

25 Criminal Trial Analogy (continued) Then, collect evidence, such as finger prints, blood spots, hair samples, carpet fibers, shoe prints, ransom notes, handwriting samples, etc. In statistics, the data are the evidence.

26 Criminal Trial Analogy (continued) Then, make initial assumption. –Defendant is innocent until proven guilty. In statistics, we always assume the null hypothesis is true.

27 Criminal Trial Analogy (continued) Then, make a decision based on the available evidence. –If there is sufficient evidence (“beyond a reasonable doubt”), reject the null hypothesis. (Behave as if defendant is guilty.) –If there is not enough evidence, do not reject the null hypothesis. (Behave as if defendant is not guilty.)

28 Very Important Point Neither decision entails proving the null hypothesis or the alternative hypothesis. We merely state there is enough evidence to behave one way or the other. This is also always true in statistics! No matter what decision we make, there is always a chance we made an error.

29 Errors in Criminal Trials

30 Errors in Hypothesis Testing

31 Definitions: Types of Errors Type I error: The null hypothesis is rejected when it is true. Type II error: The null hypothesis is not rejected when it is false. There is always a chance of making one of these errors. But, a good scientific study will minimize the chance of doing so!

32 Example: Normal Body Temperature Specify hypotheses. –H 0 :  = 98.6 degrees –H A :  < 98.6 degrees Make initial assumption:  = 98.6 degrees Collect data: Average body temp of 130 sampled adults is 98.27 degrees. How likely is it that a sample of 130 adults would have an average body temp as low as 98.27 if the average body temp of population was 98.6?

33 Using the p-value to make the decision The p-value represents how likely we would be to observe such an extreme sample if the null hypothesis were true. The p-value is a probability, so it is a number between 0 and 1. Close to 0 means “unlikely.” So if p-value is “small,” (typically, less than 0.05), then reject the null hypothesis.

34 Example (continued) One-Sample T: TEMP Test of mu = 98.6 vs mu < 98.6 Var N Mean StDev SE Mean T P TEMP 130 98.27 0.778 0.0682 -4.79 0.000 The p-value can easily be obtained from statistical software like MINITAB. (Generally, the p-value is labeled as “P”)

35 Example (continued) The p-value, <0.0001, indicates that, if the average body temperature in the population is 98.6 degrees, it is unlikely that a sample of 130 adults would have an average body temperature as extreme as 98.27 degrees. Decision: Reject the null hypothesis. Conclude that the average body temperature is lower than 98.6 degrees.

36 What type of error might we have made? Type I error here is claiming that average body temp is lower than 98.6 when in fact it really isn’t. Type II error here is failing to claim that the average body temp is lower than 98.6 when it is. We rejected the null hypothesis, i.e. claimed body temp is lower than 98.6, so we may have made a Type I error.


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