AP Statistics

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195 Terms

1

How do you check if there is outliers?

calculate IQR; anything above Q3+1.5(IQR) or below Q1-1.5(IQR) is an outlier

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2

If a graph is skewed, should we calculate the median or the mean? Why?

median; it is resistant to skews and outliers

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3

If a graph is roughly symmetrical, should we calculate the median or the mean? Why?

mean; generally is more accurate if the data has no outliers

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4

What is in the five number summary?

Minimum, Q1, Median, Q3, Maximum

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5

Relationship between variance and standard deviation?

variance=(standard deviation)^2

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6

variance definition

the variance is roughly the average of the squared differences between each observation and the mean

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7

standard deviation

the standard deviation is the square root of the variance

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8

What should we use to measure spread if the median was calculated?

IQR

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9

What should we use to measure spread if the mean was calculated?

standard deviation

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10

What is the IQR? How much of the data does it represent?

Q3-Q1; 50%

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11

How do you calculate standard deviation?

1. Type data into L1

2. Find mean with 1 Variable Stats

3. Turn L2 into (L1-mean)

4. Turn L3 into (L2)^2

5. Go to 2nd STAT over to MATH, select sum(

6. Type in L3

7. multiply it by (1/n-1)

8. Square root it

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12

What is the formula for standard deviation?

knowt flashcard image
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13

Categorical variables vs. Quantitative Variables

Categorical: individuals can be assigned to one of several groups or categories

Quantitative: takes numberical values

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14

If a possible outlier is on the fence, is it an outlier?

No

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15

Things to include when describing a distribution

Center (Mean or Median), Unusual Gaps or Outliers, Spread (Standard Deviation or IQR), Shape (Roughly Symmetric, slightly/heavily skewed left or right, bimodal, range)

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16

Explain how to standardize a variable. What is the purpose of standardizing a variable?

Subtract the distribution mean and then divide by standard deviation. Tells us how many standard deviations from the mean an observation falls, and in what direction.

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17

What effect does standardizing the values have on the distribution?

shape would be the same as the original distribution, the mean would become 0, the standard deviation would become 1

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18

What is a density curve?

a curve that (a) is on or above the horizontal axis, and (b) has exactly an area of 1

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19

Inverse Norm

when you want to find the percentile: invNorm (area, mean, standard deviation)

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20

z

(x-mean)/standard deviation

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21

pth percentile

the value with p percent observations less than is

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22

cumulative relative frequency graph

can be used to describe the position of an individual within a distribution or to locate a specified percentile of the distribution

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23

How to find and interpret the correlation coefficient r for a scatterplot

STAT plot, scatter, L1 and L2 (Plot 1: ON); STAT --> CALC --> 8:LinReg(a+bx)

No r? --> 2nd 0 (Catalog) down to Diagnostic ON

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24

r

tells us the strength of a LINEAR association. -1 to 1. Not resistant to outliers

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25

r^2

the proportion (percent) of the variation in the values of y that can be accounted for by the least squares regression line

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26

residual plot

a scatterplot of the residuals against the explanatory variable. Residual plots help us assess how well a regression line fits the data. It should have NO PATTERN

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27

regression line

a line that describes how a response variable y changes as an explanatory variable x changes. We often use a regression line to predict the value of y for a given value of x.

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28

residual formula

residual=y-y(hat) aka observed y - predicted y

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29

What method do you use to check if a distribution or probability is binomial?

BINS:

1. Binary: There only two outcomes (success and failure)

2. Independent: The events independent of one another?

3. Number: There is a fixed number of trials

4. Success: The probability of success equal in each trial

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30

What method do you use to check if a distribution or probability is geometric?

BITS:

1. Binary: There only two outcomes (success and failure)

2. Independent: The events independent of one another

3. Trials: There is not a fixed number of trials

4. Success: The probability of success equal in each trial

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31

n

number of trials

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p

probability of success

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33

k

number of successes

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34

Binomial Formula for P(X=k)

(n choose k) p^k (1-p)^(n-k)

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35

Binomial Calculator Function to find P(X=k)

binompdf(n,p,k)

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36

Binomial Calculator Function for P(X≤k)

binomcdf(n,p,k)

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37

Binomial Calculator Function for P(X≥k)

1-binomcdf(n,p,k-1)

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38

mean of a binomial distribution

np

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39

standard deviation of a binomial distribution

√(np(1-p))

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40

Geometric Formula for P(X=k)

(1-p)^(k-1) x p

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41

Geometric Calculator Function to find P(X=k)

geometpdf(p,k)

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42

Geometric Calculator Function for P(X≤k)

geometcdf(p,k)

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43

Geometric Calculator Function for P(X≥k)

1-geometcdf(p,k-1)

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44

Mean of a geometric distribution

1/p=expected number of trials until success

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45

Standard deviation of a geometric distribution

√((1-p)/(p²))

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46

What do you do if the binomial probability is for a range, rather than a specific number?

Take binomcdf(n,p,maximum) - binomcdf(n,p,minimum-1)

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47

how do you enter n choose k into the calculator?

type "n" on home screen, go to MATH --> PRB --> 3: ncr, type "k"

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48

μ(x+y)

μx+μy

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49

μ(x-y)

μx-μy

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50

σ(x+y)

√(σ²x+σ²y)

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51

What does adding or subtracting a constant effect?

Measures of center (median and mean).

Does NOT affect measures of spread (IQR and Standard Deviation) or shape.

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52

What does multiplying or dividing a constant effect?

Both measures of center (median and mean) and measures of spread (IQR and standard deviation).

Shape is not effected.

For variance, multiply by a² (if y=ax+b).

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53

σ(x-y)

√(σ²x+σ²y) --> you add to get the difference because variance is distance from mean and you cannot have a negative distance

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54

calculate μx by hand

X1P1+X2P2+.... XKPK (SigmaXKPK)

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55

calculate var(x) by hand

(X1-μx)²p(1)+(X2-μx)²p(2)+.... (Sigma(Xk-μx)²p(k))

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56

Standard deviation

square root of variance

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57

discrete random variables

a fixed set of possible x values (whole numbers)

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58

continuous random variables

-x takes all values in an interval of numbers

-can be represented by a density curve (area of 1, on or above the horizontal axis)

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59

What is the variance of the sum of 2 random variables X and Y?

(σx)²+(σy)², but ONLY if x and y are independent.

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mutually exclusive

no outcomes in common

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addition rule for mutually exclusive events

P (A U B)

P(A)+P(B)

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complement rule

P(A^C)

1-P(A)

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general addition rule (not mutually exclusive)

P(A U B)

P(A)+P(B)-P(A n B)

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intersection

P(A n B)

both A and B will occur

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conditional probability

P (A | B)

P(A n B) / P(B)

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66

independent events (how to check independence)

P(A) = P(A|B)

P(B)= P(B|A)

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67

multiplication rule for independent events

P(A n B)

P(A) x P(B)

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68

general multiplication rule (non-independent events)

P(A n B)

P(A) x P(B|A)

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69

sample space

a list of possible outcomes

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70

probability model

a description of some chance process that consists of 2 parts: a sample space S and a probability for each outcome

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event

any collection of outcomes from some chance process, designated by a capital letter (an event is a subset of the sample space)

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72

What is the P(A) if all outcomes in the sample space are equally likely?

P(A) = (number of outcomes corresponding to event A)/(total number of outcomes in sample space)

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73

Complement

probability that an event does not occur

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74

What is the sum of the probabilities of all possible outcomes?

1

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75

What is the probability of two mutually exclusive events?

P(A U B)= P(A)+P(B)

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76

five basic probability rules

1. for event A, 0≤P(A)≤1

2. P(S)=1

3. If all outcomes in the sample space are equally likely, P(A)=number of outcomes corresponding to event A / total number of outcomes in sample space

4. P(A^C) = 1-P(A)

5. If A and B are mutually exclusive, P(A n B)=P(A)+P(B)

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77

When is a two-way table helpful

displays the sample space for probabilities involving two events more clearly

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78

In statistics, what is meant by the word "or"?

could have either event or both

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79

When can a Venn Diagram be helpful?

visually represents the probabilities of not mutually exclusive events

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80

What is the general addition rule for two events?

If A and B are any two events resulting from some chance process, then the probability of A or B (or both) is P(A U B)= P(A)+P(B)-P(A n B)

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81

What does the intersection of two or more events mean?

both event A and event B occur

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82

What does the union of two or more events mean?

either event A or event B (or both) occurs

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83

What is the law of large numbers?

If we observe more and more repetitions of any chance process, the proportion of times that a specific outcome occurs approaches a single value, which we can call the probability of that outcome

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84

the probability of any outcome...

is a number between 0 and 1 that describes the proportion of times the outcome would occur in a very long series of repetitions

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85

How do you interpret a probability?

We interpret probability to represent the most accurate results if we did an infinite amount of trials

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86

What are the two myths about randomness?

1. Short-run regularity --> the idea that probability is predictable in the short run

2. Law of Averages --> people except the alternative outcome to follow a different outcome

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87

simulation

the imitation of chance behavior, based on a model that accurately reflects the situation

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88

Name and describe the four steps in performing a simulation

1. State: What is the question of interest about some chance process

2. Plan: Describe how to use a chance device to imitate one repetition of process; clearly identify outcomes and measured variables

3. Do: Perform many repetitions of the simulation

4. Conclude: results to answer question of interest

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What are some common errors when using a table of random digits?

not providing a clear description of the simulation process for the reader to replicate the simulation

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90

What does the intersection of two or more events mean?

both event A and event B occur

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91

sample

The part of the population from which we actually collect information. We use information from a sample to draw conclusions about the entire population

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population

In a statistical study, this is the entire group of individuals about which we want information

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sample survey

A study that uses an organized plan to choose a sample that represents some specific population. We base conclusions about the population on data from the sample.

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94

convenience sample

A sample selected by taking the members of the population that are easiest to reach; particularly prone to large bias.

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95

bias

The design of a statistical study shows ______ if it systematically favors certain outcomes.

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96

voluntary response sample

People decide whether to join a sample based on an open invitation; particularly prone to large bias.

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97

random sampling

The use of chance to select a sample; is the central principle of statistical sampling.

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simple random sample (SRS)

every set of n individuals has an equal chance to be the sample actually selected

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strata

Groups of individuals in a population that are similar in some way that might affect their responses.

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stratified random sample

To select this type of sample, first classify the population into groups of similar individuals, called strata. Then choose a separate SRS from each stratum to form the full sample.

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