Title: The Normal Distribution
1The Normal Distribution
2n 20,290 ? 2622.0 ? 2037.9
Population
3Y 2767.2 s 2044.7
Y 2675.4 s 1539.2
SAMPLES
Y 2588.8 s 1620.5
Y 2702.4 s 1727.1
4Sampling distribution of the mean
Y 2767.2 s 2044.7
Y 2675.4 s 1539.2
Y 2588.8 s 1620.5
Y 2702.4 s 1727.1
5Sampling distribution of the mean
1000 samples
6Sampling distribution of the mean
7Non-normal
Sampling distribution of the mean
Approximately normal
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9Sample means are normally distributed
- The mean of the sample means is m.
- The standard deviation of the sample means is
If the variable itself is normally
distributed, or sample size (n) is large
10Standard error
- The standard error of an estimate of a mean is
the standard deviation of the distribution of
sample means
We can approximate this by
11Distribution of means of samples with n 10
12Larger samples equal smaller standard errors
13Central limit theorem
14Button pushing times
Frequency
Time (ms)
15Distribution of means
16Binomial Distribution
17Normal approximation to the binomial distribution
18Example
A scientist wants to determine if a loonie is a
fair coin. He carries out an experiment where
he flips the coin 1,000,000 times, and counts the
number of heads. Heads come up 543,123 times.
Using these data, test the fairness of the loonie.
19Inference about means
Because is normally distributed
20But... We dont know s
A good approximation to the standard normal is
then
Because we estimated s, t is not exactly a
standard normal!
21t has a Students t distribution
22Degrees of freedom
Degrees of freedom for the students t
distribution for a sample mean
df n - 1
23Confidence interval for a mean
24Confidence interval for a mean
?(2) 2-tailed significance level Df degrees
of freedom SEY standard error of the mean
2595 confidence interval for a mean
Example Paradise flying snakes
Undulation rates (in Hz)
0.9, 1.4, 1.2, 1.2, 1.3, 2.0, 1.4, 1.6
26Estimate the mean and standard deviation
27Find the standard error
28Table A3.3
29Find the critical value of t
30Putting it all together...
3199 confidence interval
32Confidence interval for the variance
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34Table A3.1
3595 confidence interval for the variance of
flying snake undulation rate
3695 confidence interval for the standard
deviation of flying snake undulation rate
37One-sample t-test
38Hypotheses for one-sample t-tests
H0 The mean of the population is m0. HA The
mean of the population is not m0.
39Test statistic for one-sample t-test
m0 is the mean value proposed by H0
40Example Human body temperature
H0 Mean healthy human body temperature is
98.6ºF HA Mean healthy human body temperature
is not 98.6ºF
41Human body temperature
42Degrees of freedom
df n-1 23
43Comparing t to its distribution to find the
P-value
44A portion of the t table
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46-1.67 is closer to 0 than -2.07, so P gt a With
these data, we cannot reject the null hypothesis
that the mean human body temperature is 98.6.
47Body temperature revisited n 130
48Body temperature revisited n 130
t is further out in the tail than the critical
value, so we could reject the null hypothesis.
Human body temperature is not 98.6ºF.
49One-sample t-test Assumptions
- The variable is normally distributed.
- The sample is a random sample.