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© 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Statistics for Business and Economics Inferences Based on a Single Sample: Estimation with Confidence Intervals Chapter 7 7-1 Learning Objectives © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. State What Is Estimated 2. Distinguish Point & Interval Estimates 3. Explain Interval Estimates 4. Compute Confidence Interval Estimates for Population Mean & Proportion 5. Compute Sample Size 7-2 Thinking Challenge © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Suppose you’re interested in the average amount of money that students in this class (the population) have on them. How would you find out? 7-3 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Introduction to Estimation 7-4 Statistical Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Statistical Methods Descriptive Statistics Inferential Statistics Estimation 7-5 Hypothesis Testing Estimation Process © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7-6 Estimation Process © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Population Mean, , is unknown 7-7 Estimation Process © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Population Mean, , is unknown Sample 7-8 Random Sample Mean X = 50 Estimation Process © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Population Mean, , is unknown Sample 7-9 Random Sample Mean X = 50 I am 95% confident that is between 40 & 60. © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Unknown Population Parameters Are Estimated Estimate Population Parameter... Mean Proportion p Variance Differences 7 - 10 2 1 - 2 with Sample Statistic x p^ s 2 x1 -x2 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 11 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation 7 - 12 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Point Estimation 7 - 13 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Point Estimation 7 - 14 Interval Estimation © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Point Estimation 7 - 15 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Point Estimation 7 - 16 Interval Estimation Point Estimation © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Provides Single Value Based on Observations from 1 Sample 2. Gives No Information about How Close Value Is to the Unknown Population Parameter 3. Example: Sample MeanX = 3 Is Point Estimate of Unknown Population Mean 7 - 17 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Interval Estimation 7 - 18 Estimation Methods © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Point Estimation 7 - 19 Interval Estimation Interval Estimation © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Provides Range of Values Based on Observations from 1 Sample 2. Gives Information about Closeness to Unknown Population Parameter Stated in terms of Probability Knowing Exact Closeness Requires Knowing Unknown Population Parameter 3. Example: Unknown Population Mean Lies Between 50 & 70 with 95% Confidence 7 - 20 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 21 Key Elements of Interval Estimation © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Key Elements of Interval Estimation Sample statistic (point estimate) 7 - 22 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Key Elements of Interval Estimation Confidence interval Confidence limit (lower) 7 - 23 Sample statistic (point estimate) Confidence limit (upper) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Key Elements of Interval Estimation A probability that the population parameter falls somewhere within the interval. Confidence interval Confidence limit (lower) 7 - 24 Sample statistic (point estimate) Confidence limit (upper) Confidence Limits for Population Mean © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Parameter = Statistic ± Error © 1984-1994 T/Maker Co. 7 - 25 (1) X Error (2) Error X or X X (3) Z (4) Error Z x (5) X Z x x Error x © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 26 Many Samples Have Same Interval © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Many Samples Have Same Interval x_ 7 - 27 X © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Many Samples Have Same Interval X = ± Zx x_ 7 - 28 X © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Many Samples Have Same Interval X = ± Zx x_ -1.65x +1.65x 90% Samples 7 - 29 X © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Many Samples Have Same Interval X = ± Zx x_ -1.65x -1.96x +1.65x +1.96x 90% Samples 95% Samples 7 - 30 X © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Many Samples Have Same Interval X = ± Zx x_ -2.58x -1.65x -1.96x +1.65x +2.58x +1.96x 90% Samples 95% Samples 99% Samples 7 - 31 X Confidence Level © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Probability that the Unknown Population Parameter Falls Within Interval 2. Denoted (1 - Is Probability That Parameter Is Not Within Interval 3. Typical Values Are 99%, 95%, 90% 7 - 32 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Intervals & Confidence Level Sampling Distribution /2 of Mean x_ 1 - /2 x = X (1 - ) % of intervals contain . Intervals extend from X - ZX to X + ZX % do not. Large number of intervals 7 - 33 _ Factors Affecting Interval Width © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Data Dispersion Measured by Intervals Extend from X - ZX toX + ZX 2. Sample Size — X = / n 3. Level of Confidence (1 - ) Affects Z © 1984-1994 T/Maker Co. 7 - 34 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 35 Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimates Confidence Intervals 7 - 36 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimates Confidence Intervals Mean 7 - 37 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimates Confidence Intervals Mean 7 - 38 Proportion © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimates Confidence Intervals Mean 7 - 39 Proportion Variance Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Intervals Mean Known 7 - 40 Proportion Variance Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Intervals Mean Known 7 - 41 Proportion Unknown Variance © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimate Mean ( Known) 7 - 42 Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Intervals Mean Known 7 - 43 Proportion Unknown Variance Confidence Interval Mean ( Known) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Assumptions Population Standard Deviation Is Known Population Is Normally Distributed If Not Normal, Can Be Approximated by Normal Distribution (n 30) 7 - 44 Confidence Interval Mean ( Known) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1.Assumptions Population Standard Deviation Is Known Population Is Normally Distributed If Not Normal, Can Be Approximated by Normal Distribution (n 30) 2. Confidence Interval Estimate X Z / 2 7 - 45 n X Z / 2 n © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Mean ( Known) The mean of a random sample of n = 25 isX = 50. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for if = 10. 7 - 46 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Mean ( Known) The mean of a random sample of n = 25 isX = 50. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for if = 10. X Z / 2 X Z / 2 n n 10 10 50 1.96 50 1.96 25 25 46.08 53.92 7 - 47 Thinking Challenge © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. You’re a Q/C inspector for Gallo. The for 2-liter bottles is .05 liters. A random sample of 100 bottles showedX = 1.99 liters. What is the 90% confidence interval estimate of the true mean amount in 2-liter bottles? 22 liter liter © 1984-1994 T/Maker Co. 7 - 48 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Solution* X Z / 2 n X Z / 2 n .05 .05 1.99 1.645 1.99 1.645 100 100 1.982 1.998 7 - 49 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimate Mean ( Unknown) 7 - 50 Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Intervals Mean Known 7 - 51 Proportion Unknown Variance Confidence Interval Mean ( Unknown) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Assumptions Population Standard Deviation Is Unknown Population Must Be Normally Distributed 2. Use Student’s t Distribution 7 - 52 Confidence Interval Mean ( Unknown) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Assumptions Population Standard Deviation Is Unknown Population Must Be Normally Distributed 2. Use Student’s t Distribution 3. Confidence Interval Estimate S S X t / 2, n 1 X t / 2, n 1 n n 7 - 53 Student’s t Distribution © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Standard Normal Bell-Shaped t (df = 13) Symmetric t (df = 5) ‘Fatter’ Tails 0 7 - 54 Z t Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 55 Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 7 - 56 Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 t values 7 - 57 Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. /2 v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 /2 0 t values 7 - 58 t Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Assume: n=3 df = n - 1 = 2 = .10 /2 =.05 /2 v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 /2 0 t values 7 - 59 t Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Assume: n=3 df = n - 1 = 2 = .10 /2 =.05 /2 v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 /2 0 t values 7 - 60 t Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Assume: n=3 df = n - 1 = 2 = .10 /2 =.05 /2 v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 .05 0 t values 7 - 61 t Student’s t Table © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Assume: n=3 df = n - 1 = 2 = .10 /2 =.05 /2 v t.10 t.05 t.025 1 3.078 6.314 12.706 2 1.886 2.920 4.303 3 1.638 2.353 3.182 .05 0 t values 7 - 62 2.920 t Degrees of Freedom (df) © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Number of Observations that Are Free to Vary After Sample Statistic Has Been Calculated 2. Example Sum of 3 Numbers Is 6 X1 = 1 (or Any Number) X2 = 2 (or Any Number) X3 = 3 (Cannot Vary) Sum = 6 7 - 63 degrees of freedom = n -1 = 3 -1 =2 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Mean ( Unknown) A random sample of n = 25 hasx = 50 & s = 8. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for . 7 - 64 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Mean ( Unknown) A random sample of n = 25 hasx = 50 & s = 8. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for . S X t / 2, n 1 X t / 2, n 1 n 8 50 2.0639 50 2.0639 25 46.69 53.30 7 - 65 S n 8 25 Thinking Challenge © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. You’re a time study analyst in manufacturing. You’ve recorded the following task times (min.): 3.6, 4.2, 4.0, 3.5, 3.8, 3.1. What is the 90% confidence interval estimate of the population mean task time? 7 - 66 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Solution* X = 3.7 S = 3.8987 n = 6, df = n - 1 = 6 - 1 = 5 S / n = 3.8987 / 6 = 1.592 t.05,5 = 2.0150 3.7 - (2.015)(1.592) 3.7 + (2.015)(1.592) 0.492 6.908 7 - 67 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Estimate of Proportion 7 - 68 Confidence Interval Estimates © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Intervals Mean Known 7 - 69 Proportion Unknown Variance © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 7 - 70 Confidence Interval Proportion Confidence Interval Proportion © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Assumptions Two Categorical Outcomes Population Follows Binomial Distribution Normal Approximation Can Be Used 7 - 71 npˆ 3 npˆ 1 pˆ Does Not Include 0 or 1 Confidence Interval Proportion © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Assumptions Two Categorical Outcomes Population Follows Binomial Distribution Normal Approximation Can Be Used npˆ 3 npˆ 1 pˆ Does Not Include 0 or 1 2. Confidence Interval Estimate (1 p ) (1 p ) p p p z 2 p p z 2 n n 7 - 72 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Proportion A random sample of 400 graduates showed 32 went to grad school. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for p. 7 - 73 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Estimation Example Proportion A random sample of 400 graduates showed 32 went to grad school. Set up a 95% confidence interval estimate for p. (1 p ) (1 p ) p p p Z / 2 p p Z / 2 n n .08 (1 .08) .08 (1 .08) .08 1.96 p .08 1.96 400 400 .053 p .107 7 - 74 Thinking Challenge © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. You’re a production manager for a newspaper. You want to find the % defective. Of 200 newspapers, 35 had defects. What is the 90% confidence interval estimate of the population proportion defective? 7 - 75 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Confidence Interval Solution* (1 p ) (1 p ) p p p z / 2 p p z / 2 n n .175 (.825) .175 (.825) .175 1.645 p .175 1.645 200 200 .1308 p .2192 7 - 76 © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Finding Sample Sizes 7 - 77 Finding Sample Sizes for Estimating © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. (1) Z X x Error x (2) Error Z x Z (3) Z n Error 2 2 2 Error Is Also Called Bound, B 7 - 78 I don’t want to sample too much or too little! n Sample Size Example © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. What sample size is needed to be 90% confident of being correct within 5? A pilot study suggested that the standard deviation is 45. 7 - 79 Sample Size Example © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. What sample size is needed to be 90% confident of being correct within 5? A pilot study suggested that the standard deviation is 45. Z 1.645 45 n 219.2 220 2 2 Error 5 2 7 - 80 2 2 2 Thinking Challenge © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. You work in Human Resources at Merrill Lynch. You plan to survey employees to find their average medical expenses. You want to be 95% confident that the sample mean is within ± $50. A pilot study showed that was about $400. What sample size do you use? 7 - 81 Sample Size Solution* © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Z 2 2 n Error 2 2 2 1.96 400 502 245.86 246 7 - 82 Conclusion © 2000 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1. Stated What Is Estimated 2. Distinguished Point & Interval Estimates 3. Explained Interval Estimates 4. Computed Confidence Interval Estimates for Population Mean & Proportion 5. Computed Sample Size 7 - 83 End of Chapter Any blank slides that follow are blank intentionally.