Starnes, UPDATED The Practice of Statistics, 6e, Chapter 1

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39 Terms

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Statistics

The science and art of collecting, analyzing, and drawing conclusions from data.

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Individual

An object described in a set of data. Individuals can be people, animals, or things.

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Variable

An attribute that can take different values for different individuals.

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Categorical variable

Assigns labels that place each individual into a particular group, called a category.

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Quantitative variable

Takes number values that are quantities—counts or measurements.

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Discrete variable

A quantitative variable that takes a fixed set of possible values with gaps between them.

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continuous variable

A quantitative variable that can take any value in an interval on the number line.

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Distribution

Of a variable, tells us what values the variable takes and how often it takes those values.

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Frequency table

Shows the number of individuals having each value.

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Relative frequency table

Shows the proportion or percent of individuals having each value.

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Bar graph

Shows each category as a bar. The heights of the bars show the category frequencies or relative frequencies.

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Pie chart

Shows each category as a slice of the "pie." The areas of the slices are proportional to the category frequencies or relative frequencies.

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Two-way table

A table of counts that summarizes data on the relationship between two categorical variables for some group of individuals.

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Marginal relative frequency

Gives the percent or proportion of individuals that have a specific value for one categorical variable.

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Joint relative frequency

Gives the percent or proportion of individuals that have a specific value for one categorical variable and a specific value for another categorical variable.

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Conditional relative frequency

Gives the percent or proportion of individuals that have a specific value for one categorical variable among individuals who share the same value of another categorical variable (the condition).

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Side-by-side bar graph

Displays the distribution of a categorical variable for each value of another categorical variable. The bars are grouped together based on the values of one of the categorical variables and placed side by side.

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Segmented bar graph

Displays the distribution of a categorical variable as segments of a rectangle, with the area of each segment proportional to the percent of individuals in the corresponding category.

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Mosaic plot

A modified segmented bar graph in which the width of each rectangle is proportional to the number of individuals in the corresponding category.

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Association

If knowing the value of one variable helps us predict the value of the other.

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Dotplot

Shows each data value as a dot above its location on a number line.

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Symmetric distribution

If the right side of the graph (containing the half of observations with the largest values) is approximately a mirror image of the left side.

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Skewed distribution

If one side of the graph is much longer than the other side.

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Stemplot

Shows each data value separated into two parts: a stem, which consists of all but the final digit, and a leaf, the final digit.

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Histogram

Shows each interval of values as a bar. The heights of the bars show the frequencies or relative frequencies of values in each interval.

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Mean

The average of all the individual data values.

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Statistic

A number that describes some characteristic of a sample.

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Parameter

A number that describes some characteristic of a population.

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Resistant

Not sensitive to extreme values.

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Median

The midpoint of a distribution, the number such that about half the observations are smaller and about half are larger.

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Range

Distance between the minimum value and the maximum value.

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Standard deviation

Measures the typical distance of the values in a distribution from the mean.

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Variance

The average squared deviation.

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Quartiles

Divide the ordered data set into four groups having roughly the same number of values.

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First quartile Q1

Median of the data values that are to the left of the median in the ordered list.

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Third quartile Q3

Median of the data values that are to the right of the median in the ordered list.

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Interquartile range (IQR)

The distance between the first and third quartiles of a distribution.

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Five-number summary

Consists of the minimum, the first quartile Q1, the median, the third quartile Q3, and the maximum.

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Boxplot

A visual representation of the five-number summary.