Chapter 7: Sampling and Sampling Distributions
Chapter 8: Interval Estimation
Chapter 9: Hypothesis Testing
Chapter 10: Comparisons Involving Means
Chapter 11: Comparisons Involving Proportions
Chapter 12: Regression Analysis
100

What is the difference between a population and a sample?

A population is the full group of interest; a sample is a subset of that population.

100

What is the general structure of a confidence interval?

Point estimate ± margin of error

100

What does the null hypothesis usually represent?

The default position, status quo, or no-change claim

100

When comparing two unrelated groups, what type of sampling situation are we usually dealing with? (Dependent or Independent)

Independent samples

100

When comparing two categorical groups, what are we usually comparing?

Two population proportions

100

In regression analysis, what is the response variable?

The outcome variable being predicted or explained

200

What type of bias occurs when certain groups are systematically left out of the sample?

Selection bias

200

If the population standard deviation is known, should we use z or t for a confidence interval for the population mean?

z

200

Which hypothesis contains the research claim we are trying to find evidence for?

The alternative hypothesis

200

When comparing before-and-after results from the same subjects, what method should be used?

Matched-pairs procedure

200

What is the point estimator for the difference between two population proportions?

1 − p̂2

200

In regression analysis, what is a predictor variable?

A variable used to explain or predict the response variable

300

What type of bias occurs when people who respond to a survey differ systematically from people who do not respond?

Nonresponse bias

300

If the population standard deviation is unknown, should we usually use z or t for a confidence interval for the population mean?

t

300

Which hypothesis always contains some form of equality, such as =, ≤, or ≥?

The null hypothesis

300

What is the point estimator for the difference between two population means?

1 − x̄2 

300

In a two-proportion hypothesis test where H0 assumes the proportions are equal, what estimate is used in the standard error?

The pooled proportion

300

Can standard regression analysis prove cause-and-effect relationships?

No

400

In a stratified random sample, what must happen after the population is divided into strata?

A random sample is taken from each stratum, usually in proportion to the stratum’s size.

400

What happens to the margin of error when the confidence level increases, holding everything else constant?

The margin of error increases.

400

If the claim says the population mean is “greater than” a value, what type of test is it? (two-tailed, one-tailed, right-tailed, left-tailed)

Right-tailed test

400

If population variances are unknown but assumed equal, what type of two-sample t procedure is used?

Pooled-variance t procedure

400

Is the pooled proportion used for confidence intervals for the difference between two proportions?

No. A pooled proportion is used only in a hypothesis test when the null assumes the two proportions are equal. For a confidence interval, we are estimating the actual difference between the two proportions, so we keep p^1 and p^2 separate.



 

400

In the simple regression model y = β0 + β1x + ε, what are β0 and β1?

Unknown population parameters

500

In a cluster sample, what is randomly selected?

Entire clusters or groups

500

What happens to the width of a confidence interval when the sample size increases, holding everything else constant?

The interval becomes narrower.

500

If the claim says the population mean is “less than” a value, what type of test is it?

Left-tailed test

500

If population variances are unknown and not assumed equal, should we pool the variances?

No

500

If a confidence interval for p1 − p2 contains 0, what does that suggest?

No clear evidence of a difference between the population proportions

500

What does the slope coefficient tell us in simple linear regression?

The expected change in y for a one-unit increase in x

600

What does the central limit theorem say happens to the sampling distribution of the sample mean as sample size increases?

It becomes approximately normal.

600

What does a 95% confidence level mean in repeated sampling?

About 95% of intervals constructed this way would contain the true population parameter.

600

If the claim says the population mean is “different from” a value, what type of test is it?

Two-tailed test

600

If a confidence interval for μ1 − μ2 contains 0, what does that suggest?

There is not sufficient evidence of a difference between the means.

600

What distribution is used for the test statistic in a two-proportion hypothesis test?

Standard normal, or z distribution

600

What is a residual?

The observed value minus the predicted value, y − ŷ

700

What is the formula for the standard error of the sample mean?

σ / √n

700

Why is it incorrect to say there is a 95% probability that μ is in one specific interval?

μ is fixed; the interval either contains it or it does not.

700

What is a Type I error?

Rejecting the null hypothesis when it is actually true

700

If a confidence interval for μ1 − μ2 is entirely positive, what does that suggest?

Population 1 likely has a larger mean than population 2.

700

What type of test is used to compare observed category counts to expected category counts?

Chi-square goodness-of-fit test

700

What does ordinary least squares minimize?

The sum of squared residuals, or SSE

800

If the population standard deviation is 12 and the sample size is 36, what is the standard error of the sample mean?

2
σ / √n.
Here, σ = 12 and n = 36, so standard error = 12 / √36 = 12 / 6 = 2.

800

What Excel function can be used to find the margin of error for a population mean when σ is known?

CONFIDENCE.NORM

800

What is a Type II error?

Failing to reject the null hypothesis when it is actually false

800

In many two-mean hypothesis tests, what is the hypothesized difference d0?

0

800

What type of test is used to determine whether two categorical variables are related?

Chi-square test for independence

800

In multiple regression, how do we interpret a slope coefficient?

The expected change in y for a one-unit increase in that predictor, holding other predictors constant

900

For a sample proportion, what are the two conditions for using the normal approximation?

np ≥ 5 and n(1 − p) ≥ 5

900

What Excel function can be used to find the margin of error for a population mean when σ is unknown?

CONFIDENCE.T

900

What decision should be made when the p-value is less than α?

Reject the null hypothesis.

900

What method is used when comparing the means of three or more groups?

One-way ANOVA

900

In a chi-square goodness-of-fit test, what is the lowest possible value of the chi-square test statistic?

0

900

What does R Square measure?

The proportion of variation in the response variable explained by the regression model

1000

What type of control chart is used to monitor a sample proportion for a categorical variable?

p-chart

1000

For a confidence interval for a population proportion, what is the point estimate?

The sample proportion, p-hat

1000

Why do we say “fail to reject” instead of “accept” the null hypothesis?

Because not rejecting H0 does not prove H0 is true.

1000

In ANOVA, what does a small p-value suggest?

At least one population mean differs from the others.

1000

In a test for independence, what does the null hypothesis state?

The two categorical variables are independent, or not related.  

1000

If a regression coefficient has a p-value less than 0.05, what do we usually conclude at the 5% significance level?

The coefficient is statistically significant.

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