Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Lesson #34 Review and Summary. Important Topics - Descriptive statistics - Basic probability, independence - Sensitivity and specificity - Relative risk,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Lesson #34 Review and Summary. Important Topics - Descriptive statistics - Basic probability, independence - Sensitivity and specificity - Relative risk,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lesson #34 Review and Summary

2 Important Topics - Descriptive statistics - Basic probability, independence - Sensitivity and specificity - Relative risk, odds ratio - Binomial distribution - Normal distribution, standardizing - Reading tables (Z, t, F,  2 )

3 - Inference (C.I. and hypothesis testing) - one mean(one-sample t-test) - two paired means(paired t-test) - two ind. mean(pooled t-test) - several means(ANOVA) - one proportion (Z-test for one proportion) - two proportions - cat. var. association(contingency table) (Z-test for two proportions) - num. var. association(correlation/regression)

4 A colleague had data on body fat for runners and swimmers, and performed a pooled t-test to compare the two types of athletes. I made similar measurements for runners and swimmers, but I also included volleyball players. Now that I have three groups, how do I go about testing for a difference?

5 Our team has developed a new medical technique that we think will lead to better survival rates than a standard technique. We have two groups of patients; one group which received the standard technique, and another which received our new technique. How can we obtain statistical evidence that our technique is better?

6 We have collected data on 20 women who are taking a certain drug, and want to see if the average age of menopause of such women is greater than 55 years old. How does one make such a statement?

7 At work, we wanted to look at the effectiveness of a clean-up effort at a nearby lake. A pollution index was measured at a number of sites around the lake before the clean-up effort, and again six months after. The data was analyzed using an ANOVA, where the two time periods were the two treatments. Is this OK, or is there a better method?

8 I work as a volunteer for the Red Cross, and one of my supervisors wants me to look for a relationship between blood type and whether or not the person has ever donated blood. I have a random sample of 150 people that I took from a large university class, where I asked people these two questions. What kind of analysis should I use?

9 A physician in my office wishes to quantify the relationship between the amount of moderate to strenuous exercise and systolic blood pressure. The exercise variable is converted to METS, which is a quantitative variable. I have suggested she use a correlational analysis. Do you have any further suggestions?

10 I recently saw a study which said that 30% of teenagers in a rural area eat a nutritious diet. I expect that this percentage is even lower in the urban area where I live. How can I go about finding out if this is true? I have asked a bunch of teenagers at a local school about their diet.

11 My wife works for the Department of Mental Health. She says they want to see if there is a difference in the average levels of a certain blood chemical between people with depression and those not suffering from depression. How does one go about performing such an analysis?

12


Download ppt "Lesson #34 Review and Summary. Important Topics - Descriptive statistics - Basic probability, independence - Sensitivity and specificity - Relative risk,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google