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(a brief over view) Inferential Statistics.

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Presentation on theme: "(a brief over view) Inferential Statistics."— Presentation transcript:

1 (a brief over view) Inferential Statistics

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5 Parameters Population Statistics Sample

6 data Qualitative (nominal or categorical) Quantitative (numerical) Discrete (think counting) Continuous (think measuring)

7 Descriptive Statistics (just the #’s) Mean = average Median = middle most data score Mode = most frequently occurring data score Range = max score – min score Inter Quartile Range = Q 3 – Q 1 Standard deviation = deviation (difference) from the mean

8 The middle of the data set meanmedianmode The “spread” of the data set Range Inter-quartile range Standard deviation

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11 Standard deviation example

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13 Example for grouped data

14 INFERential Statistics Putting it all together….what do the statistics infer?!

15 What do the numbers tell us?!

16 The “Normal” distribution

17 Matchboxes in stavanger

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19 Normal Distribution Excel example

20 Significance tests: Is there a real difference??? Two tailed tests One tailed tests

21 Matchboxes 40 S = 3 373431434649

22 Frank Wilcoxon 1892-1965 Chemist Statistician Inventor of….. The Wilcoxon (T) signed ranks test!!! (yay!)

23 Related Data: The Wilcoxon (T) Signed Ranks Test Is for related ordinal data only Ordinal data must be RANKED (1 st, 2 nd, 3 rd, etc) Lowest number always gets 1 Used to see if there is a real (statistical) difference in the data examples of related ordinal data:

24 The Wilcoxon (T) Signed Ranks Test For ALL statistical significance tests: 1. State the null (H o ) and alternative (H a or H 1 ) hypothesis. H o ALWAYS says no statistical difference H 1 ALWAYS says there IS a statistical difference. 2. Pick a statistical test (Wilcoxon) 3. Calculate Statistic (T) 4. Decide whether to accept or reject H o based on alpha level

25 Example

26 The eye ball test Does it look like there is a difference?!

27 The Wilcoxon Test ……a slightly more accurate test that we all can agree on Null Hypothesis: There is no signifacant difference between the two lessons. Alternative Hypothesis: There IS a significant difference between the two lessons. (Reject H 0 if T ≤ Critical Value) Step 1: Calculate the difference (B-A)

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29 2: Rank the data 1. Lowest difference is assigned a value of 1 2. Ignore sign differences (take absolute value of differences) 3. Ignore zero values 4. For tied scores, use the median rank

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31 3 is the 2 nd, 3 rd, and 4 th, rank therefore use the MEDIAN (middle) rank

32 8 is tied for the 9 th and 10 th rank so use the MEDIAN (middle) rank of 9.5

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34 3. Sum up (+) vs (-) ranks Sum (+) = 12+9.5+3+5+ 3+9.5+3+14+7+11+13= 90 Sum (-) = 1+6+8=15 Use the SMALLER of these two values……this is your statistic T!!! So T = 15.

35 Find critical value: (Remember N = 14 Since we dropped 0)

36 Significance tests: Is there a real difference??? Two tailed tests One tailed tests

37 Average difference T =15 ≤ 21 (alpha = 0.05) T = 15 ≤ 15 (alpha =0.02) 98% of the time, you will not have this big of a difference by chance……the difference SHOULD be significant!

38 Reject H 0. Therefore we have sufficient evidence to accept H 1 and we conclude: the difference between the lecture based class and investigation based class is significant according to our data!

39 Recap: State Null and Alternative hypothesis Choose confidence level (usually 0.05) Take the differences and rank data Sum up (+) and (-) differences and use smaller of two….this is your T-value. Find the Critical Value from the table. Reject H 0 if T ≤ C.V. (note if T > all C.V. then there is no significant difference)

40 Some extra review… http://www.social-science.co.uk/stats/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mbpGCxYya3M http://www.khanacademy.org/video/statistics--standard- deviation?playlist=Statistics http://www.khanacademy.org/video/statistics--standard- deviation?playlist=Statistics


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