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Statistical Reasoning

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Title: Statistical Reasoning


1
Statistical Reasoning
  • For Communication Majors

2
Mean
  • This is a common statistic, and its simple.
  • When we refer to the average, this is usually
    what we mean.
  • Add the values and divide by the number of values
    you have.

3
Mean Example
  • A weekly newspaper has seven employees. Whats
    the mean salary? Here are their salaries
  • Editor -- 37,000
  • Assistant Editor -- 32,000
  • Reporter -- 28,000
  • Ad Sales Manager -- 38,000
  • Ad Sales Agent -- 31,000
  • 2 Circulation People -- 22,000 each

4
Mean Example
  • Calculation Add 37,000 32,000 28,000
    38,000 31,000 22,000 22,000 210,000. Then
    divide by 7 Mean salary is 30,000
  • NOTE Mean can be deceptive if there is a wide
    spread in the numbers. For example, if the editor
    and ad sales manager made 60,000 each, the sales
    agent made 40,000, and each of the other workers
    made 12,500, the mean would be the same, but the
    picture of the average salary at the newspaper
    would be much different.

5
Median
  • The median means the middle.
  • It is the value in the dead center of the list of
    values when they are lined up from largest to
    smallest.
  • It represents the average person or group. For
    example, if we say the average household or
    the average worker, then what we are looking
    for is the median, as in ordinary or most
    common. We arent really talking about the
    average or mean.

6
Median Example
  • Consider the newsroom salaries used in the
    previous example lined up from largest to
    smallest 38,000, 37,000, 32,000, 31,000, 28,000,
    22,000, 22,000.
  • The salary in the middle, the median, is
    31,000.
  • If the halfway lies between two numbers, split
    them.

7
Percent Change
  • If the city increased parking fines from 10 to
    15, by what percentage did the fines increase?
  • This is simple, too. Subtract the old value from
    the new value (15-105), then divide by the old
    value (5/100.5). Multiply the result by 100
    (0.5x100 50 percent ) and thats the percent
    change.
  • 15-105 5/100.5 0.5x100 50 percent.

8
Tax Example
  • If the average property tax increased by 2,000 a
    year (Were using median here to find 2,000),
    what is the average percent change?
  • New value 10,000
  • Old value 8,000
  • 10,000 8,000 2,000
  • 2,000/8,000 .25
  • 100x.25 25 percent
  • So the percent change is 25 percent

9
Per capita, Rates and Comparisons
  • Per capita refers to the rate per person. It
    helps make comparisons among large groups, like
    cities.
  • To get per capita, simply divide the number of
    incidents by the number of people.
  • A Southern city with a population of 450,000
    experienced 16 murders during 2009. What is the
    citys murder rate per 100,000 population?
  • 450,000/100,000 4.5 16/4.5 3.5 per 100,000

10
Per capita example
  • If a city has a population of 600,000 and
    experiences 12 murders a year, the per capita
    murder rate would be 12 divided by 600,000.
  • To avoid tiny decimals, divide 600,000 by 100,000
    and report the rate as a number per 100,000
    population.
  • 600,000/100,000 6 12/6 2, so the murder rate
    is 2 per 100,000 people.
  • You can also find the percent change of the per
    capita rate over time to discover the trend in
    the murder rate.

11
Comparison Example
  • Suppose you want to know how dangerous the city
    is compared to other cities. Our example city has
    a population of 600,000 with 12 murders. A nearby
    city has 26,000 and 4 murders. Which is more
    dangerous? Find the per capita murder rate of
    each to know.
  • Per capita rate for City 1 is 2 per 100,000 per
    capita rate for City 2 is 4 per 26,000. City 2 is
    more dangerous because it has 15.4 murders per
    100,000 (4/.26 15.38) people compared to City
    1s 2 murders per 100,000.

12
Standard Deviation
  • In most situations, most people or values will
    group toward the middle.
  • Those that dont are different.
  • If many group outside the middle, then that tells
    you something about the situation it tells you
    that whatever youre looking at isnt expected.

13
Standard Deviation
  • For normal situations, the curve will look
    bell-shaped, like this

14
Standard Deviation
  • Most healthy women will eat between 1,700 and
    2,000 calories a day. If you plot how many
    calories women eat, each womans intake will be
    one value. Plot them on a sheet of paper along a
    line and most of the values (number of calories)
    will land in the middle of the spread. That will
    be what is called a normal distribution.

Normal distribution
15
Standard Deviation
  • In a normal distribution, about 68 of the women
    will gather in the middle. They are one standard
    deviation away from the middle on either side.
    (The blue area on the graph.)

16
  • Two standard deviations away will account for
    about 95. (The blue areas and the brown areas.)
  • So, 95 of the values in most situations will be
    considered normal. However, all but the middle
    68 will be somewhat abnormal, but not
    excessively abnormal.

17
  • Three standard deviations away from the middle
    will account for about 99 of the values. (The
    blue, brown, and green areas). The values in the
    green areas are more abnormal, but we expect
    about 4 of values to fall into these areas,
    because life is not perfect.

18
Standard Deviation
  • If a scientific study concludes that 99 of the
    values fall within three standard deviations,
    then you have a normal situation and the
    conclusions can be trusted.
  • A good public opinion survey, for example, that
    concludes Americans support the Presidents
    policies can be trusted if the values (support
    for the president) fall in a normal bell curve
    with most of the people saying they support the
    policies.

19
  • But what about the situations where the values
    dont fall in a normal bell curve?

20
  • Then you have untrustworthy results, or at least
    you know that more than you would expect dont
    fit the normal pattern. In the graph at top, most
    of the values fell to the left of center. In
    other words, most of the values are outside the
    normal range.

21
Margin of Error
  • Margin of Error deserves better than the
    throw-away line it gets in the bottom of stories
    about polling data. Writers who don't understand
    margin of error, and its importance in
    interpreting scientific research, can easily
    embarrass themselves and their news
    organizations.

22
Margin of Error
  • The margin of error is what statisticians call a
    confidence interval. The math behind it is much
    like the math behind the standard deviation. So
    you can think of the margin of error at the 95
    percent confidence interval as being equal to two
    standard deviations in your polling sample.
    Occasionally you will see surveys with a 99
    percent confidence interval, which would
    correspond to 3 standard deviations and a much
    larger margin of error because the more you
    include the fringe, the more likely your results
    will be untrustworthy.

23
Margin of Error
  • Lets consider a particular week's poll as a
    repeat of the previous week's. In the first week,
    Candidate A received support from 57 of those
    polled. Candidate B received 43, a 14 point
    difference. In the second week, Candidate A
    received 53 support and Candidate B received
    47, a 6 point difference. Both polls had a
    margin of error of 4 points. So, is Candidate B
    gaining on Candidate A?
  • No. Statistically, there is no change from the
    previous week's poll. Politician B has made up no
    measurable ground on Politician A because the
    movement for both politicians is within the 4
    point margin of error.

24
Questions Journalists Should Ask
  • Where did the data come from? Always ask this one
    first. You always want to know who did the
    research that created the data you're going to
    write about. Just because a report comes from a
    group with a vested interest in its results
    doesn't guarantee the report is a sham. But you
    should always be extra skeptical when looking at
    research generated by people with a political
    agenda. At the least, they have plenty of
    incentive NOT to tell you about data they found
    that contradict their organization's position.

25
Questions
  • Have the data been peer-reviewed? If it was, you
    know that the data you'll be looking at are at
    least minimally reliable because other pollsters
    have given their blessing on the data. If it
    wasnt, thats a sign that it might not be valid
    data.

26
Questions
  • How were the data collected? This one is real
    important to ask, especially if the data were not
    peer-reviewed. If the data come from a survey,
    for example, you want to know that the people who
    responded to the survey were selected at random.

27
Questions
  • Be skeptical when dealing with comparisons.
    Researchers like to do something called a
    "regression," a process that compares one thing
    to another to see if they are statistically
    related. They will call such a relationship a
    "correlation." Always remember that a correlation
    DOES NOT mean causation.

28
Questions
  • Finally, be aware of numbers taken out of
    context. Again, data that are "cherry picked" to
    look interesting might mean something else
    entirely once it is placed in a different context.

29
Survey Sample Sizes
  • The population of a study is everyone who could
    have been included. For a national poll, then,
    the population would include every adult in the
    U.S. a number that would be impractical to
    poll. Some researchers take a random sample. The
    larger the sample the more likely it will be
    representative of the population. But a sample of
    400 is usually good enough for most surveys. Most
    national polls, though, survey 1,500 to 2,500
    people. The margin of error in a sample 1
    divided by the square root of the number of
    people in the sample

30
Survey Sample Sizes
  • The margin of error in a sample 1 divided by
    the square root of the number of people in the
    sample
  • In a survey of 2,500 people, the square root is
    50. So, 1/50 .02
  • In a survey of 400 people, the square root is 20.
    So, 1/20 .05
  • This shows the margin of error increases
    significantly as the number surveyed decreases.

31
Picking the Right Statistical Test
  • There are different kinds of stats tests and the
    correct one will be the one that provides the
    best answers based on the type of data you have
    collected.
  • It is best to enlist the help of a statistics pro
    to analyze your data.
  • You can also use SPSS, a computer program that
    conducts the statistical computations for you
    when you enter the data. So by knowing what type
    of test to run, you can enter the data into SPSS
    and run the test.

32
Use of Statistics
  • Statistical tests allow researchers to find out
    whether their findings are significant i.e.
    What is the probability that what we think is a
    relationship between two variables is really just
    a chance occurrence? The lower the probability of
    chance, the more believable the results.
  • Researchers hypothesize. They write a statement
    that they believe will be true from the data they
    collect. They base this on previous research and
    on common sense. Then, they write the null
    hypothesis. The null is the exact opposite of
    the hypothesis the researcher has chosen. The
    statistical tests are done to test whether the
    null hypothesis is correct. If it is WRONG, then
    the researchers hypothesis must be correct.

33
Use of Statistics
  • Researchers use statistics to determine the
    probability of the data being correct. They
    usually want a confidence level of .05 and it is
    written p .05 That means that the data will
    be 95 percent accurate. (In other words, if the
    data were collected 100 more times, the results
    would fall within the range of the current study
    95 times.) That means the data are pretty
    reliable.

34
ANOVA
  • Most common statistical test Analysis of
    Variance (ANOVA) is a statistical technique that
    is used to compare the means of more than two
    groups. There are One-way ANOVA (one dependent
    variable and one independent variable) and
    Two-way ANOVA (one dependent and two independent
    variables). Note about variables the
    dependent variable (say, choice of candidate) is
    what will be affected by the question or the
    experiment the independent variables are
    controlled by the researcher (say, choosing
    gender or income as factors that affect the
    dependent variable choice of candidate).
  • Use the ANOVA test only if you are comparing data
    from at least 3 groups.

35
T-test
  • Another common statistical test t-test uses the
    standard deviation of the sample to help
    determine interesting stuff about the larger
    population.
  • Use when you have only 2 groups of data, say
    results from men and women and you want to know
    whether their answers are significantly different
    or just from random chance.

36
Other types of tests
  • There are many other types of tests for
    interpreting data that require a rather high
    level of skill in statistics. If your data are
    complicated and you want to find out as much
    about the data as possible, you may want to
    consult a stats pro for help.
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