Ch.1 Terms
Ch.1 Problems
Ch. 10 Terms
Ch. 10 Problems
Wild
100

The science of data as well as the art of distilling meaning from data

What is Statistics?

100

In the book: p. 13, #13

Quantitative

100

A  group of individuals or objects referred to by every survey/poll either directly or indirectly

What is Population

100

p. 338, # 7

a. Cluster sample

b. Stratified sample

c. Systematic sample

100

The type of qualitative data that includes names, labels, and categories

What are Nominal Qualitative (Categorical) Data?

200

Systematicallu recorded information WITH its context (variables)

What are data?

200

In the book: p. 14, #23

Who: coffee drinkers at Newcastle University coffee station

What: amount of money contributed

Population: all people in honor system payment situations

200

The one topic that the survey deals with

What is Parameter of Interest?

200

p. 339, #11

a. Voluntary response bias

b. convenience sample

200

A variable which is usually a number with its unit of measure

What is a Quantitative variable?

300

The use of numbers (% or count) along with graphs to present information about a data set

What is Descriptive Statistics?

300

p. 14, # 27 (don't need to identify the units for quantitative data but do identify whether any qualitative data is Nominal or Ordinal)

Who: 54 bears

What: weight, neck size, length, gender

When: not specified

Where: not specified

Why: to estimate weight from easier-to-measure variables

How: researchers collected data on 54 bears they were able to catch

Quantitative: weight, neck size, length

Qualitative (Nominal): gender

300

A numerical value for a certain characteristic of a population. You almost never know the true value

What is a Parameter?

300

p. 341, #35

a. Seems neutral

b. Biased towards yes because of "Great tradition." Better to ask, "Do you favor continued funding for the space program?"

300

The qualitative variable that includes some type of ranking

What are Ordinal Qualitative (Categorical) Data?

400

The use of the data from a sample of a larger population to make estimates, predictions, or other generalizations about a larger population

What is Inferential Statistics?

400

p. 14, # 31 (don't need to identify the units for quantitative data but do identify whether any qualitative data is Nominal or Ordinal)

Who: 882 births

What: Mother's age, length of pregnancy, type of birth, level of prenatal care, birth weight of baby, gender of baby, baby's health problems

When: 1998-2000

Where: large city hospital

Why: researchers were investigating the impact of prenatal care on newborn health

How: not specified, but probably from hospital records

Quantitative: mother's age, length of pregnancy, birth weight of baby

Qualitative (Nominal): type of birth, gender, baby's health problems

Qualitative (ordinal): level of prenatal care

400

The natural tendency for randomly selected samples to differ (providing different data and leads to different statistics).

What is sampling variability (sample error)?

400

p. 339, #21

a. Population: cars

b. Parameter: proportion of up-to-date registration, insurance, and safety inspections

c. Sampling frame: all cars on that road

d. Sample: those actually stopped by roadblock

e. Method: cluster sample of location; census within cluster

f. Left out: local drivers that do not take that road

g. Bias: time of day and location may not be representative of all cars

400

The W's of stats problems

Who, What, Why, When, Where, How

500

Variables that may be classified into two categories with words or numerals. These variables do not have units.

What are Qualitative (Categorical) Data?

500

p. 15, # 35 (don't need to identify the units for quantitative data but do identify whether any qualitative data is Nominal or Ordinal)p. 15, # 35

Who: streams

What: name of stream, substrate of the stream, acidity of water, temperature, BCI

When: not specified

Where: upstate NY

Why: to study the ecology of streams

How: not specified

Quantitative: acidity, temperature, BSI

Qualitative (nominal): Stream name, Substrate of the stream

500

The word used to describe a sample that is not representative of the population

What is biased?
500

p. 339, # 17

a. Population: US Adults

b. Parameter: proportion who have used and benefited from alternative medicine

c. Sampling frame: all Consumer Union Subscribers

d. Sample: those who responded

e. Method: questionnaire to all (nonrandom)

f. Left out: those who are more Consumers Union subscribers

g. Nonresponse bias. Those who respond may have strong feelings one way or another.

500

Debunk the stat: as piracy rates have decreased, global temperatures have increased. Therefore, piracy is a global warming preventative.

Please tell me you got that.