We think we have SPSS under control--stay tuned. Sorry for the mess today:
Day 6, Wednesday Sept.5
Reading: IPS 1.3 Density curves 64-69 & Normal distribution, pp.64-80.
Read ahead: Normal quantile plots, 80--84; then Ch. 2. I'll have a handout
on Normal quantile Monday. Also Chapter 2 for Monday.
Hand in: using the table (copied from
day 5) Non-standard normal, table problems: |
Read, discuss = = = = Normal quantiles: 1.119, 1.120 |
Optional UseNormal Density
Applet http://www.whfreeman.com/ips5e/ to
check on all your
Normal calculations! X is normal with mean 3 and s.d. 2. Find the x for which 80% of the
observations are smaller than it. The 80th percentile. Find answers to normal table problems with SPSS (Handout p.9) |
Dear Abby: You wrote in your column that a woman is pregnant for 266 days. Who said so? I carried my baby for ten months and five days, and there is no doubt about it because I know the exact date my baby was conceived. My husband is in the Navy and it couldn't have possibly been conceived any other time because I saw him only once for an hour, and I didn't see him again until the day before the baby was born. I don't drink or run around, and there is no way this baby isn't his, so please print a retraction about that 266-day carrying time because otherwise I am in a lot of trouble.Abby's answer was consoling and gracious but not very statistical:San Diego Reader
Dear Reader: The average gestation period is 266 days. Some babies come early. Others come late. Yours was late.
The question here is not whether the baby was late. That fact
is already known. At issue is the credibility of the length of the delay. Ten
months and five days is approximately 310 days, which means that the pregnancy
exceeded the norm by 44 days. [How unusual is that?]
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Notes: See Day 5
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Monday: How do you know if it's
safe to treat a data set as if it comes from a Normal Density model?
Let SPSS draw a normal curve with the same mean and s.d. over its histogram;
or use a Normal Quantile graph.
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