Lecture 22: Tue, Nov 26 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Lecture 22: Tue, Nov 26

Description:

If this value is not contained within the confidence interval, then this is ... 100 Florida voters were polled on Election Day 2000 on their choice for president. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:42
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: jonatha195
Category:
Tags: lecture | nov | tue

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lecture 22: Tue, Nov 26


1
Lecture 22 Tue, Nov 26
  • Announcements
  • HW 8 posted, due Thurs, Dec 5th
  • Todays Lecture
  • Interval estimation of the population mean.
  • Interpretation of confidence intervals.
  • Computer simulations

2
  • The general form for a confidence
    interval is
  • or, equivalently

3
How to Use the Interval
  • For inference, we often assume a particular value
    of mu.
  • If this value is not contained within the
    confidence interval, then this is evidence
    against the hypothesized value.

4
Size of the Interval
  • What happens to the interval as n increases?
  • When the confidence level increases?
  • When the population SD increases?

5
  • Confidence Levels.

Z
0
6
  • Some commonly-used confidence levels and
    corresponding z-scores

7
Interpreting the Interval
  • Before the experiment, the probability that the
    confidence interval will cover the true parameter
    value is
  • After the experiment, we say that, with .
    confidence, the interval covers
    the true parameter value.

8
Incorrect Interpretation
  • It is incorrect to say that the probability that
    lies within the interval is
    . .
  • Why? Because is a fixed number, so that
    probability is either 0 or 1.

9
Long-Run View of Confidence Intervals
  • If we repeated our experiment over and over, and
    constructed 95 confidence intervals each time,
    we would expect about 95 of the intervals to
    cover the true value of
  • JAVA Applets

10
Information and Confidence Intervals
  • Small interval ? more information.
  • Larger interval ? less information.

11
Inference using Confidence Intervals
  • 1) Assume a particular value for mu.
  • 2) Collect data construct confidence interval
  • 3) If the hypothesized value of mu is not
    contained in the interval ? evidence that the
    value is incorrect.

C.I.
12
Example
  • A manufacturer claims that the lifetimes of their
    light bulbs are exponentially distributed with a
    mean of 100 hours.
  • Each classroom at Penn contains n40 light bulbs
    from this manufacturer.
  • In each classroom, observe lifetimes, and
    construct a 90 confidence interval.
  • Approximately 90 of these confidence intervals
    will contain 100 hours.

13
Exercise 10.20
  • The following observations are the ages of a
    random sample of eight men in a bar. It is known
    that the ages are normally distributed with a
    standard deviation of 10. Determine the 95
    confidence interval estimate of the population
    mean. Interpret what the interval estimate tells
    you.
  • 52, 68, 22, 35, 30, 56, 39, 48

14
Exercise 10.24
  • A statistics professor is investigating how many
    classes university students miss each semester.
    To answer this question, she took a random sample
    of 100 students and asked them how many classes
    they had missed in the previous semester.
  • Estimate the mean number of classes missed by all
    students at the university. Use a 99 confidence
    level and assume that the population SD is known
    to be 2.2 classes.

15
Components of a Confidence Interval
UCL
LCL
Width on each side
16
Example
  • Let be a random sample from a
    population with (unknown) mean and standard
    deviation .
  • The 95 confidence interval for the mean is given
    by 0,10, and is centered around the sample
    mean. Find the 90 confidence interval for the
    mean .
  • Assume the sample size in (a) is n100. What is
    the value of .

17
Confidence Intervals fora Proportion
  • XBinomial(n,p), p unknown
  • Given X, how to construct a confidence interval
    for p?
  • A use the sampling distribution of

18
  • For npgt5 and n(1-p)gt5, is approximately
    normal
  • So

19
  • After some algebra, we get
  • Plugging in for p, we get a confidence
    interval

20
Example
  • 100 Florida voters were polled on Election Day
    2000 on their choice for president. 60 of the
    respondents said they voted for Bush, and 40 said
    they voted for Gore.
  • a) Find a 95 confidence interval for the true
    proportion of Florida voters that favored Bush
    over Gore.

21
Quick Quiz
  • Which of the following four components can the
    experimenter control?
  • Sample mean
  • Confidence level
  • Population variance
  • Sample size

22
Quick Quiz
  • Describe what happens to the width of the
    confidence interval when each of the following
    happens.
  • Confidence level increases
  • Confidence level decreases
  • Population variance increases
  • Population standard deviation decreases
  • Sample size increases
  • Sample size decreases
  • Sample mean increases
  • Sample mean decreases
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com