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Material Taken From: Mathematics for the international student Mathematical Studies SL Mal Coad, Glen Whiffen, John Owen, Robert Haese, Sandra Haese and.

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Presentation on theme: "Material Taken From: Mathematics for the international student Mathematical Studies SL Mal Coad, Glen Whiffen, John Owen, Robert Haese, Sandra Haese and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Material Taken From: Mathematics for the international student Mathematical Studies SL Mal Coad, Glen Whiffen, John Owen, Robert Haese, Sandra Haese and Mark Bruce Haese and Haese Publications, 2004

2 Consider this table: How many people are in the sample? – How many males? – How many females? This is called a 2 x 2 contingency table. Section 18D – The Χ 2 Test of Independence

3 Gender vs. Regular Exercise How are gender and regular exercise related?

4 Gender vs. Regular Exercise The variables may be dependent: – Females may be more likely to exercise regularly than males. The variables may be independent: – Gender has no effect on whether they exercise regularly. A chi-squared test is used to determine whether two variables from the same sample are independent.

5 How to do it: 1)Write the null hypothesis (H 0) and the alternate hypothesis (H 1 ). 2)Create contingency tables for observed and expected values. 3)Calculate the chi-square statistic and degrees of freedom. 4)Find the chi-squared critical value (booklet). Depends on the level of significance (p) and the degrees of freedom (v). 5)Determine whether or not to accept the null hypothesis.

6 1. Null and Alternate Hypothesis H 0 : ________ is independent of ________ H 1 : ________ is dependent on ________

7 2. Contingency Tables  Observed Frequencies  Expected Frequencies Column1Column2Totals Row1absum row1 Row2cdsum row2 TotalsSum column1Sum column2total Column1Column2Totals Row1sum row1 Row2sum row2 Totalssum column 1sum column 2total

8 3. Χ 2 Statistic On TI-84 Put observed data in Matrix A Stat> Tests > C: χ 2 -Test Calculate Output: Χ 2  Χ 2 calculated value df  degrees of freedom in Matrix B  expected values

9 4. Find the Critical Value Get this from the formula booklet. Significance level (p) is always given in the problem.  A 5% significance level = 95% confidence level Degrees of freedom: v = (c - 1)(r – 1) where c = number of columns in table and r = number of rows in table

10 5. Accept Null Hypothesis? If X 2 calc < Critical Value ACCEPT the null hypothesis If X 2 calc > Critical Value REJECT the null hypothesis Can this be determined from the p-value?

11 On the calculator: Put your contingency table in matrix A  STAT  TESTS  C: χ 2 Test  Observed: [A]  Expected: [B] (this is where you want to go)  Calculate

12 Homework Exercises 6.9.1 from Hodder Education textbook, Pg 291-293 #1, #3, #5


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