Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
2.1 Describing Location in a Distribution See p.85 for example at top of the page. Measuring Position: Percentiles Definition: Percentile The pth percentile of a distribution is the value with p percent of the observations less than it. See Mr. Pryor's first test example. 79 81 80 77 73 83 74 93 78 80 75 67 73 77 83 86 90 79 85 83 89 84 82 77 72 Alternate Definition: Percentile 1. The summary measures that divide a ranked data set into 100 equal parts (100) 2. The approximate value of the kth percentile, denoted pk, is pk = the value of the (k*n)/100th term in a ranked data set Ex. Find the 20th percentile of the data set 24 28 33 33 37 39 47 51 59 n = 9 so (k*n)/100 = (20*9)/100 = 180/100 = 1.8 approx = 2 So we want the 2nd observation. => p20 = 28 1 Ex. 3 Find the 65th percentile of the data set 5 6 6 7 9 9 10 11 12 14 15 k = 65 n = 12 so (65812)/100 = 7.8 approx = 8th observation so p65 = 10 2 The book notes p. 86 that there are several ways that mathematicians and statisticians calculate and interpret the percentile. In fact, there is not a universal way to determine percentiles. We will continue to do what the book suggests and the AP test reader will accept any reasonable definition as well as have MC answers that will be correct by any reasonable method. 3 CUMULATIVE RELATIVE FREQUENCY GRAPHS These are created with percentiles 1. A graph that shows the total # of values that fall below the upper boundary of each class. 2. The plot is always Nondecreasing. See page 86 88 for the example for this topic. Age of the first 44 presidents when elected example. 100% 0% This is for the 4044 class and we plot the point at 4.5% since 45 would be at the 4.5th percentile Age at Inauguration Example What can we learn? p87 4 p88 Age of U.S. Presidents Do CYU on P89 5 Note: The 1st Quartile would be at the 25th Percentile The 2nd Quartile would be at the 50th Percentile The 3rd Quartile would be at the 75th Percentile 6 MEASURING POSITION: z Scores When you convert observations from original values to standard deviation units it is known as standardizing. Definition: Standardized value (z score) If x is an observation from a distribution that has known mean and standard deviation, the standardized value of x is z = (x mean)/(standard deviation) A standardized value is often called a z score. A zscore tells us how many standard deviations from the mean an observation falls and in what direction! (+) zscore = lies to the right of the mean () zscore = lies to the left of the mean 7 mean or Notation: Z = population sample standard deviation In other words: Observation Mean Stand. Deviation 8 Mr. Pryor's First Test, Again p90 79 81 80 77 73 83 74 93 78 80 75 67 73 77 83 86 90 79 85 83 89 84 82 77 72 9 Jenny Takes Another Test z = (8276)/4 = 1.50 Her 82 in chemistry was 1.5 standard deviation above the mean score for the class. CYU on p91 10 Example: Find the zscore of 33 Data: 24 28 33 33 37 39 47 Mean = 39 Standard Deviation = 11.34681 51 59 Z = (3339)/(11.34681) = .53 33 lies .53 standard deviations below the mean. 11 Ex. 2 Find the zscore of 12 Data: 3 5 6 6 7 9 9 10 11 12 14 15 Mean = 8.916667 St. Deviation: 3.679386 Z = (128.916667)/(3.679386) = .84 12 lies .84 Standard Deviations above the mean See extra examples on p18 of Black notebook 12 TRANSFORMING DATA EFFECT OF ADDING OR SUBTRACTING A CONSTANT Adding the same number a (either positive, zero, or negative) to each observation. 1. Adds a to measures of center and location (mean, median, quartiles, percentiles) but 2. Does not change the shape of the distribution or measures of spread (range, IQR, standard deviation) 13 EFFECT OF MULTIPLYING (OR DIVIDING) BY A CONSTANT Multiplying ( or dividing) each observation by the same number b (positive, negative, or zero) 1. multiplies (divides) measures of center and location (mean, median, quartiles, percentiles) by b. 2. multiplies (divides) measures of spread (range, IQR, standard deviation) by b (absolute value of b) but 3. does not change the shape of the distribution. 14 Estimating Room Width p93 8 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 14 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 16 16 16 17 17 17 17 18 18 20 22 25 27 35 38 40 Example: Effect of Subtracting by a Constant Example: Effect of multiplying by a constant 15 Example page 96 and 97 Too Cool at the Cabin? F = (9/5)C + 32 a) Mean 9/5(8.43)+32 = 47.17 b) S. Dev. 9/5(2.27) = 4.09 c) 9/5(11) +32 = 51.8 degrees F. 16 DENSITY CURVES RECALL: We learned some basic steps to exploring quantitative data. 1. Always plot your data: make a graph, usually a dotplot, stemplot or histogram. 2. Look for the overall pattern (shape, center, spread) and for striking departures such as outliers. 3. Calculate a numerical summary to briefly describe center and spread. Let's add one more step! 4. Sometimes the overall pattern of a large number of observations is so regular that we can describe it by a smooth curve. 17 Example: SeventhGrade Vocabulary Scores p100 From Histogram to density curve 18 Definition: Density Curve A density curve is a curve that 1. is always on or above the horizontal axis, and 2. has area exactly 1 underneath it. A density curve describes the overall pattern of a distribution. The area under the curve and above any interval of values on the horizontal axis is the proportion of all observations that fall in that interval. No set of real data is exactly described by a density curve. The curve is an approximation that is easy to use and accurate enough for practical use. 19 Describing Density Curves 1. The median of a density curve is the "equalareas point", the point with half the area under the curve to its left and the remaining half of the area to its right. 2. The mean of the density curve is the "balance point" of the distribution. (i.e. The mean is the point at which the curve would balance if made of solid material.) a) If the density curve is symmetric then the mean and median are the same and they lie at the center of the curve: b) If the curve is skewed then the mean is pulled away from the median in the direction of the long tail. Right Skew Left Skew CYU on page 103 20 Homework p 105 1, 5, 915 odd Homework p107 1923 odd, omit 17, 31, 3338all 21