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ENGINEERING 2304 Computer Programming for Engineers ENGR 2304-56619 Summer 2015 Class 5 Class Outline • Quiz • Review Homework • Plotting Equations • Plotting Data • Statistical Tools • Histograms • Practice Exercises Class 5Quiz • Pull out a sheet of paper and solve the following problems: 1. According to the US Census Bureau, in 2000, there were 20,851,820 people living in the state of Texas. In 2010, there were 25,145,561. Use linear interpolation to estimate the population, to the nearest person, in 2007. 2. Find the mean, median, mode and range of the following data set: 13, 29, 12, 15, 12, 13, 42, 17, 13, 18 23, 12, 15, 20, 13 3. Graph the equation 3x-4y=15. Quotes of the Day: “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics.” –Mark Twain, 1906 "The statistics on sanity are that one out of every four Americans is suffering from some form of mental illness. Think of your three best friends. If they're okay, then it's you.”–Rita Mae Brown “One of the first things taught in introductory statistics textbooks is that correlation is not causation. It is also one of the first things forgotten.” -Thomas Sowell Homework Questions Plotting Equations: Data Points and Linear Regression • Scatter Plots: A simple Cartesian X-Y plot of a dependent and independent variable. Independent: x-axis. Dependent: y-axis. • All scatter plots should have: • Title • Labeled Axis with Units Linear Regression: Trend Lines • Trend lines or best fit line • Can use linear, quadratic, exponential, etc regression. • For simple linear regression: α = 𝑦 − β𝑥 Correlation Strong Correlation Weak Correlation R^2: correlation coefficient Presenting Single-Variable Data: Pie Charts Pie Charts: • Simple statistical graph • Divided into regions, arc length/angle corresponds to percent of total. • Often a poor choice, as the viewer cannot easily tell the exact values of data. Only a rough tool at best. Presenting Single-Variable Data: Bar Charts • Bar charts present values of a category on a labeled axis. Usually superior to a pie chart. Single-Variable Statistical Tools • Mean: Sum of data over the number of data points. • Median: When arranged least to greatest, the middle term. For an even number of terms, the mean of the two middle terms. • Mode: The most common value in a set. • Range: Greatest minus the least • Standard Deviation: A measure of how far from the mean, or how “spread out” the data is. Histograms • Group data in to ranges, or “bins.” • Height of graph of each bin is the number in the bin, (referred to as frequency) or a percent of the whole. Cumulative Histograms Example 1: Linear Scatter Plot and Interpolation Exercise Example 2: Quadratic Scatter Plot and Regression Example 3: Exponential Regression, Moore’s Law Example 4: Pie Charts and Bar Charts • Data for January 2015 US Auto Sales • Create a pie and bar chart for this data. Example 5: Statistical Analysis: Height • Find mean, median mode, and range for class height data. • Create a histogram of this data.