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Statistics Chapter 6 / 7 Review. Random Variables and Their Probability Distributions Discrete random variables – can take on only a countable or finite.

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Presentation on theme: "Statistics Chapter 6 / 7 Review. Random Variables and Their Probability Distributions Discrete random variables – can take on only a countable or finite."— Presentation transcript:

1 Statistics Chapter 6 / 7 Review

2 Random Variables and Their Probability Distributions Discrete random variables – can take on only a countable or finite number of values. Continuous random variables – can take on countless values in an interval on the real line Probability distributions of random variables – An assignment of probabilities to the specific values or a range of values for a random variable.

3 Discrete Probability Distributions 1)Each value of the random variable has an assigned probability. 2)The sum of all the assigned probabilities must equal 1.

4 Means and Standard Deviations for Discrete Probability Distributions

5 Binomial Experiments 1)There are a fixed number of trials. This is denoted by n. 2)The n trials are independent and repeated under identical conditions. 3)Each trial has two outcomes: S = successF = failure

6 Binomial Experiments 4)For each trial, the probability of success, p, remains the same. Thus, the probability of failure is 1 – p = q. 5)The central problem is to determine the probability of r successes out of n trials.

7 Binomial Probability Formula

8 Find the probability of observing 6 successes in 10 trials if the probability of success is p = 0.4. a). 0.111b). 0.251c). 0.0002d). 0.022

9 Binomial Probability Formula Find the probability of observing 6 successes in 10 trials if the probability of success is p = 0.4. a). 0.111b). 0.251c). 0.0002d). 0.022

10 Binomial Probabilities At times, we will need to calculate other probabilities: P(r < k) P(r ≤ k) P(r > k) P(r ≥ k) where k is a specified value less than or equal to the number of trials, n.

11 Mean and Standard Deviation of a Binomial Distribution

12 Critical Thinking Unusual values – For a binomial distribution, it is unusual for the number of successes r to be more than 2.5 standard deviations from the mean. – This can be used as an indicator to determine whether a specified number of r out of n trials in a binomial experiment is unusual.

13 Chapter 7

14 Features of the Normal Curve Smooth line and symmetric around µ. Highest point directly above µ. The curve never touches the horizontal axis in either direction. As σ increases, the curve spreads out. As σ decreases, the curve becomes more peaked around µ. Inflection points at µ ± σ.

15 Normal Probability The area under any normal curve will always be 1. The portion of the area under the curve within a given interval represents the probability that a measurement will lie in that interval.

16 The Empirical Rule

17 Raw Scores and z Scores

18 Distribution of z-Scores If the original x values are normally distributed, so are the z scores of these x values. –µ = 0 –σ = 1

19 Area to the Left of a Given z Value

20 Area to the Right of a Given z Value

21 Area Between Two z Values


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