Chapter 11 Data Descriptions and Probability Distributions Section 5 Normal Distribution.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 6 Normal Random Variable
Advertisements

Section 7.4 Approximating the Binomial Distribution Using the Normal Distribution HAWKES LEARNING SYSTEMS math courseware specialists Copyright © 2008.
Biostatistics Unit 4 Probability.
Biostatistics Unit 4 - Probability.
CHAPTER 6 Statistical Analysis of Experimental Data
Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel, 4e © 2004 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chap 6-1 Chapter 6 The Normal Distribution and Other Continuous Distributions.
QMS 6351 Statistics and Research Methods Probability and Probability distributions Chapter 4, page 161 Chapter 5 (5.1) Chapter 6 (6.2) Prof. Vera Adamchik.
Normal Probability Distributions Chapter 5. § 5.1 Introduction to Normal Distributions and the Standard Distribution.
The Normal Distribution. History Abraham de Moivre (1733) – consultant to gamblers Pierre Simon Laplace – mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, determinist.
Chapter 6: Normal Probability Distributions
© Copyright McGraw-Hill CHAPTER 6 The Normal Distribution.
Chapter 6 The Normal Probability Distribution
8.5 Normal Distributions We have seen that the histogram for a binomial distribution with n = 20 trials and p = 0.50 was shaped like a bell if we join.
HAWKES LEARNING SYSTEMS math courseware specialists Copyright © 2010 by Hawkes Learning Systems/Quant Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Continuous.
Section 7.1 The STANDARD NORMAL CURVE
Normal Approximation Of The Binomial Distribution:
Continuous Random Variables
Chapter 6: Probability Distributions
Copyright © 2013, 2009, and 2007, Pearson Education, Inc. 1 PROBABILITIES FOR CONTINUOUS RANDOM VARIABLES THE NORMAL DISTRIBUTION CHAPTER 8_B.
Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 11 Section 1 – Slide 1 of 34 Chapter 11 Section 1 Random Variables.
QBM117 Business Statistics Probability and Probability Distributions Continuous Probability Distributions 1.
Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel, 4e © 2004 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chap 6-1 Chapter 6 The Normal Distribution and Other Continuous Distributions.
Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 11e1 Learning Objectives for Section 11.5 Normal Distributions The student will be able to identify what is meant.
The Gaussian (Normal) Distribution: More Details & Some Applications.
Random Variables Numerical Quantities whose values are determine by the outcome of a random experiment.
Understanding Basic Statistics Chapter Seven Normal Distributions.
Continuous Random Variables Continuous Random Variables Chapter 6.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Normal Curves and Sampling Distributions 7.
Chapter 6 Normal Probability Distribution Lecture 1 Sections: 6.1 – 6.2.
The Normal Distribution Chapter 6. Outline 6-1Introduction 6-2Properties of a Normal Distribution 6-3The Standard Normal Distribution 6-4Applications.
Biostatistics, statistical software III. Population, statistical sample. Probability, probability variables. Important distributions. Properties of the.
Normal Probability Distributions Chapter 5. § 5.1 Introduction to Normal Distributions and the Standard Distribution.
Copyright © 2013, 2009, and 2007, Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 6 Probability Distributions Section 6.2 Probabilities for Bell-Shaped Distributions.
Slide Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 6 The Normal Distribution.
The Normal Distribution
Continuous Probability Distributions Statistics for Management and Economics Chapter 8.
Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 and 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter The Normal Probability Distribution 7.
Section 2.1 Density Curves. Get out a coin and flip it 5 times. Count how many heads you get. Get out a coin and flip it 5 times. Count how many heads.
Statistics Chapter 6 / 7 Review. Random Variables and Their Probability Distributions Discrete random variables – can take on only a countable or finite.
Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 11e1 Chapter 11 Review Important Terms, Symbols, Concepts Sect Graphing Data Bar graphs, broken-line graphs,
Chapter 6 The Normal Distribution.  The Normal Distribution  The Standard Normal Distribution  Applications of Normal Distributions  Sampling Distributions.
Continuous Distributions. Continuous random variables Are numerical variables whose values fall within a range or interval Are measurements Can be described.
Continuous Probability Distribution By: Dr. Wan Azlinda Binti Wan Mohamed.
Chapter 7 The Normal Probability Distribution 7.1 Properties of the Normal Distribution.
1 ES Chapter 3 ~ Normal Probability Distributions.
1 Lecture 6 Outline 1. Two kinds of random variables a. Discrete random variables b. Continuous random variables 2. Symmetric distributions 3. Normal distributions.
Basic Business Statistics, 10e © 2006 Prentice-Hall, Inc.. Chap 6-1 Chapter 6 The Normal Distribution and Other Continuous Distributions Basic Business.
Copyright (C) 2002 Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Understandable Statistics S eventh Edition By Brase and Brase Prepared by: Lynn Smith.
CIVE Engineering Mathematics 2.2 (20 credits) Statistics and Probability Lecture 4 Probability distributions -Poisson (discrete events) -Binomial.
THE NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
Theoretical distributions: the Normal distribution.
13-5 The Normal Distribution
7 Normal Curves and Sampling Distributions
NORMAL DISTRIBUTION.
Normal Probability Distributions
Introduction to the Normal Curve
BIOS 501 Lecture 3 Binomial and Normal Distribution
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
The Normal Probability Distribution
The normal distribution
5.4 Finding Probabilities for a Normal Distribution
Normal Probability Distributions
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
CONTINUOUS RANDOM VARIABLES AND THE NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
Lecture Slides Elementary Statistics Twelfth Edition
10-5 The normal distribution
Lecture Slides Essentials of Statistics 5th Edition
Chapter 5 Normal Probability Distributions.
Lecture Slides Essentials of Statistics 5th Edition
Normal Probability Distribution Lecture 1 Sections: 6.1 – 6.2
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 11 Data Descriptions and Probability Distributions Section 5 Normal Distribution

2Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Learning Objectives for Section 11.5 Normal Distributions  The student will be able to identify what is meant by a normal distribution.  The student will be able to find the area under normal curves.  The student will be able to approximate the binomial distribution with a normal distribution.

3Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Normal Distributions We have seen that the histogram for a binomial distribution with n = 20 trials and p = 0.50 was shaped like a bell if we join the tops of the rectangles with a smooth curve. Real world data, such as weights of individuals, heights, test scores have histograms that have a symmetric bell shape. We call such distributions normal distributions. They will be the focus of this section.

4Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Mathematicians and the Normal Curve Three mathematicians contributed to the mathematical foundation for this curve. They are Abraham De Moivre, Pierre Laplace and Carl Friedrich Gauss.

5Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Abraham De Moivre De Moivre pioneered the development of analytic geometry and the theory of probability. He published The Doctrine of Chance in The definition of statistical independence appears in this book together with many problems with dice and other games. He also investigated mortality statistics and the foundation of the theory of annuitiestheory of probability De Moivre

6Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Pierre Laplace Laplace systematized and elaborated probability theory in "Essai Philosophique sur les Probabilités" (Philosophical Essay on Probability, 1814). He was the first to publish the value of the Gaussian integral. probabilityGaussian integral We will talk about Gauss later. Laplace

7Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Bell-Shaped Curves  Many frequency distributions have a symmetric, bell shaped histogram.  Example 1: The frequency distribution of heights of males is symmetric about a mean of 69.5 inches.  Example 2: IQ scores are symmetrically distributed about a mean of 100, with a standard deviation of 15 or 16. The frequency distribution of IQ scores is bell shaped.  Example 3: SAT test scores have a bell shaped, symmetric distribution.

8Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Properties of Normal Curves  Normal curves are bell-shaped and are symmetrical with respect to the vertical line x =  (the mean).  The curve approaches, but does not touch, the horizontal axis as x gets very large (or x gets very small)  The shape of a normal curve is completely determined by its mean and standard deviation - a small standard deviation indicates a tight clustering about the mean and thus a tall, narrow curve; a large standard deviation indicates a large deviation from the mean and thus a broad, flat curve.

9Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Graphs of Normal Curves Several normal curves

10Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Probability and Area under the Normal Curve  Key fact: For a normally distributed variable, the percentage of observations that lie within a specified range equals the corresponding area under its associated normal curve.  This is approximately true for a variable that is approximately normally distributed.  P(a < x < b) = probability that the random variable X is between a and b = area under the normal curve between x = a and x = b.  The total area under a normal curve is 1.

11Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Finding Areas Under a Normal Curve Finding the area under a normal curve between x = a and x = b requires calculus. We can circumvent this problem by looking up the values in a table. However, the shape of each normal curve is determined by the standard deviation; the greater the standard deviation, the “flatter” and more spread out the normal curve will be. We would need infinitely many tables. The solution is to standardize a normally distributed variable, and to use the table for the standard normal curve.

12Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Standard Normal Distribution The standard normal distribution has a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1. Values on the horizontal axis are called z values. Values on the y axis are probabilities and are decimal numbers between 0 and 1, inclusive.

13Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Areas under the Standard Normal Curve For the following examples, 1. Draw a diagram 2. Shade the appropriate area 3. Use a table or a TI 83 to find the probability (A) Find P(0 < z < 1.2)

14Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Example 2 A traffic study at one point on an interstate highway shows that vehicle speeds are normally distributed with a mean of 61.3 mph and a standard deviation of 3.3 miles per hour. If a vehicle is randomly checked, find the probability that its speed is between 55 and 60 miles per hour.

15Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Step 2. Convert x score to a standardized z score: Step 3. Use table or TI 83 to find area. Answer: = Example 2 (continued) Step 1. Draw a normal curve and shade appropriate area. State the probability: P(55 < x < 60) where x is speed. = P(–1.91 < z < -0.39)

16Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Mathematical Equation for Bell-Shaped Curves Carl Friedrich Gauss, a mathematician, was probably the first to realize that certain data had bell-shaped distributions. He determined that the following equation could be used to describe these distributions: where ,  are the mean and standard deviation of the data.

17Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Using the Normal Curve to Approximate Binomial Probabilities Example: Find the probability of getting 12 or more Heads when you toss a coin 20 times.

18Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Using the Normal Curve to Approximate Binomial Probabilities Example: Find the probability of getting 12 or more Heads when you toss a coin 20 times. Solution: We have seen that the histogram for a binomial distribution with n = 20 trials and p = 0.50 was shaped like a bell if we join the tops of the rectangles with a smooth curve. To find the probability that x (number of heads) is greater than or equal to 12, we would have to calculate P(x=12) + P(x=13) + P(x=14) + …+ P(x=20). The calculations would be very tedious, to say the least.

19Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Using the Normal Curve to Approximate Binomial Probabilities  We could, instead, treat the binomial distribution as a normal curve, since its shape is pretty close to being a bell-shaped curve, and then find the probability that x is greater than 12 using the procedure for finding areas under a normal curve.  = np = 10  = sqrt(np(1–p)) = sqrt(5) = 2.24 Probability that x ≥ 12 = total area in yellow

20Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Approximating Binomial by Normal (continued) Because the normal curve is continuous and the binomial distribution is discrete, we have to make what is called a correction for continuity. Since we want P(x ≥ 12), we must include the rectangular area corresponding to x = 12. The base of this rectangle starts at 11.5 and ends at Therefore, we must find P(x > 11.5). The rectangle representing the P(x = 12) extends from 11.5 to 12.5 on the horizontal axis.

21Barnett/Ziegler/Byleen Finite Mathematics 12e Approximating Binomial by Normal (continued) Using the procedure for finding area under a non-standard normal curve we get = P(z > 0.770) = 0.5 – =

22

23