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Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:

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Presentation on theme: "Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday: Sept. 22, 12 noon. Your TA will tell you where to hand these in

2 Random Sampling - what did we learn? It’s difficult to do properly Why not just point? Computers and random numbers Can you tell if your numbers were random?

3 Sampling distribution of the mean

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6 How confident can we be about this one estimate of the mean?

7 Estimating error of the mean Hard method: take a few MORE random samples, and get more estimates for the mean Easy method: use the formula:

8 Confidence interval –a range of values surrounding the sample estimate that is likely to contain the population parameter We are 95% confident that the true mean lies in this interval

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11  = 5.14 Y = 5.26

12 What if we calculate 95% confidence intervals? Approximately ± 2 S.E. Expect that 95% of the intervals from the class will contain the true population mean, 5.14 70 invervals * 5% = 3.5 Expect that 3 or 4 will not contain the mean, and the rest will

13 Mean ± 95% C.I.

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15 What if we took larger samples? Say, n=20 instead of n=10?

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18 Probability

19 The Birthday Challenge

20 Probability The proportion of times the event occurs if we repeat a random trial over and over again under the same conditions Pr[A] –The probability of event A

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22 (cannot both occur simultaneously)

23 Mutually exclusive

24 Venn diagram

25 Mutually exclusive Venn diagram Sample space

26 Mutually exclusive Venn diagram Sample space Possible outcome Pr[B] proportional to area

27 Mutually exclusive

28 Pr(A and B) = 0

29 Mutually exclusive Visual definition - areas do not overlap in Venn diagram

30 Not mutually exclusive Pr(A and B)  0 Pr(purple AND square)  0

31 For example

32 Probability distribution

33 Random variable - a measurement that changes from one observation to the next because of chance

34 Probability distribution for the outcome of a roll of a die Number rolled Frequency

35 Probability distribution for the sum of a roll of two dice Sum of two dice Frequency

36 The addition rule

37 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2] = ?

38 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2]

39 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2]

40 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2] = Pr[1]+Pr[2] Sum of areas

41 The probability of a range For families of 8 children, Pr[Number of boys ≥ 6] = ?

42 The probability of a range For families of 8 children, Pr[Number of boys ≥ 6] = Pr[6 or 7 or 8] = Pr[6]+Pr[7]+Pr[8]

43 The probabilities of all possibilities add to 1.

44 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6] = ?

45 Addition Rule Pr[1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6] = 1

46 Probability of Not Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = ?

47 Probability of Not Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = 1 - Pr[2] = 5/6

48 Probability of Not Pr[NOT rolling a 2] = 1 - Pr[2] = 5/6 Pr[not A] = 1-Pr[A]

49 The addition rule

50 What if they are not mutually exclusive?

51 General Addition Rule A B Pr[A or B] = ?

52 General Addition Rule A B Pr[A or B] = ? A B

53 General Addition Rule A B Pr[A or B] = ? A B

54 General Addition Rule A B Pr[A or B] = ? A B

55 General Addition Rule A B A B

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57 Pr[Walks or flies] = ?

58 General Addition Rule Pr[Walks or flies] = ?

59 General Addition Rule Pr[Walks or Flies] = Pr[Walks] + Pr[Flies] - Pr[Walks and Flies]

60 General Addition Rule

61 Independence

62 Equivalent definition: The occurrence of one does not change the probability that the second will occur

63 Multiplication rule If two events A and B are independent, then Pr[A and B] = Pr[A] x Pr[B]

64 Pr[boy]=0.512

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66 General Addition Rule

67 Multiplication rule If two events A and B are independent, then Pr[A and B] = Pr[A] x Pr[B]

68 OR versus AND OR statements: –Involve addition –It matters if the events are mutually exclusive AND statements: –Involve multiplication –It matters if the events are independent

69 Probability trees

70 Sex of two children family

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72 Dependent events Variables are not always independent; in fact they are often not

73 Fig wasps

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75 Testing independence Are the previous state of the fig and the sex of an egg laid independent? Test the multiplication rule: Pr[A and B] ?=? Pr[A] x Pr[B] Pr[fig already has eggs and male] ?=? P[fig already has eggs] x Pr[male]

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83 Conditional probability Pr[X|Y]

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85 Law of total probability:

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87 The general multiplication rule

88 Does not require independence between A and B

89 Bayes' theorem

90 In class exercise

91 Answer

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96 Homework Assignment Chapter 1, Problems 6, 15 Chapter 2, Problems 6, 8, 9, 12 Chapter 3, Problems 4, 6, 15 Chapter 4, Problem 16 Due a week from Friday: Sept. 22, 12 noon. Your TA will tell you where to hand these in


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