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Are you here?. Yes, and I’m ready to learn Yes, and I need a nap No. HW - Problem 6. When a truck load of apples arrives at a packing plant, a random sample of 125 is selected and examined for bruises, discoloration, and other defects.
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Are you here? • Yes, and I’m ready to learn • Yes, and I need a nap • No
HW - Problem 6 • When a truck load of apples arrives at a packing plant, a random sample of 125 is selected and examined for bruises, discoloration, and other defects. • The whole truckload will be rejected if more than 5% of the sample is unsatisfactory. • Suppose that in fact 9% of the apples on the truck do not meet the desired standard. • What is the probability that the shipment will be accepted anyway.
What is the probability that the shipment will be accepted anyway? • 0.062 • 1-0.062 • 0 • 1 • -1.54
Both of the sampling distributions we’ve looked at are Normal. For proportions For means Standard Deviation
Standard Deviation vs. Standard Error • We don’t know p, μ, or σ, we’re stuck, right? • Nope. We will use sample statistics to estimate these population parameters. • Sample statistics are notated as: s, • Whenever we estimate the standard deviation of a sampling distribution, we call it a standard error.
For a sample proportion, the standard error is For the sample mean, the standard error is Standard Error
Exciting Statistics about ISU Students -2011 data • 69.1% of sexually active students use condoms • American College Health Association • n=272
By the 68-95-99.7% Rule, we know about 68% of all samples will have ’s within 1 SE of p about 95% of all samples will have ’s within 2 SEs of p about 99.7% of all samples will have ’s within 3 SEs of p A Confidence Interval
Certainty vs. Precision • The choice of confidence level is somewhat arbitrary, but keep in mind this tension between certainty and precision when selecting your confidence level. • The most commonly chosen confidence levels are 90%, 95%, and 99% (but any percentage can be used).
What Does “95% Confidence” Really Mean? • Each confidence interval uses a sample statistic to estimate a population parameter. • But, since samples vary, the statistics we use, and thus the confidence intervals we construct, vary as well.
What Does “95% Confidence” Really Mean? (cont.) • The figure to the right shows that some of our confidence intervals capture the true proportion (the green horizontal line), while others do not:
Homework Problem • A catalog sales company promises to deliver orders placed on the Internet within 3 days. • Follow-up calls to a few randomly selected customers show that a 95% CI for the proportion of all orders that arrive on time is 81% ± 4%
Which of the following statements is correct? • Between 77% and 85% of all orders arrive on time. • One can be 95% confident that the true population percentage of orders place on the Internet that arrive within 3 days is between 77% and 85% • One can be 95% confident that all random samples of customers will show that 81% of orders arrive on time • 95% of all random samples of customers will show that between 77% and 85% of orders arrive on time.
When the conditions are met, we are ready to find the confidence interval for the population proportion, p. The confidence interval is where The critical value, z*, depends on the particular confidence level, C, that you specify. One-Proportion z-Interval
Z* is the Critical Value • 80% z*=1.282 • 90% z*=1.645 • 95% z*=1.96 • 98%z*=2.326 • 99% z*=2.576
Critical Values (cont.) • Example: For a 90% confidence interval, the critical value is 1.645:
HW – Problem 18 • Often, on surveys there are two ways of asking the same question. • 1) Do you believe the death penalty is fair or unfairly applied? • 2) Do you believe the death penalty is unfair or fairly applied?
HW – Problem 18 • Survey • 1) n=597 • 2) n=597 • For the second phrasing, 45% said the death penalty is fairly applied.
Suppose 54% of the respondents in survey #1 said the death penalty was fairly applied. Does this fall within a 95% confidence interval for survey #2? • Yes, it falls within my CI • No, it does not fall within my CI
Margin of Error: Certainty vs. Precision • The more confident we want to be, the larger our z* has to be • But to be more precise (i.e. have a smaller ME and interval), we need a larger sample size, n. • We can claim, with 95% confidence, that the interval contains the true population proportion. • The extent of the interval on either side of is called the margin of error (ME). • In general, confidence intervals have the form estimate± ME.
Margin of Error - Problem • Suppose the truth is that 56% of ISU student drink every weekend. • We want to create a 95% confidence interval, but we also want to be as precise as possible. • How many people should we sample? • How large should our margin of error be?
How many people should we sample to get a ME of 1%? • 1,000 • Between 1,000 and 4,000 • Between 4,000 and 8,000 • Between 8,000 and 16,000
Upcoming work • Quiz #4 in class today • HW #8 due next Sunday • Part 3 of Data Project due April 2nd