1 / 52

Chapter

Chapter. 7. The Normal Probability Distribution. Jury Selection Problem. There are 60 women and 40 men waiting outside the courtroom in the jury pool.

Download Presentation

Chapter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 The Normal Probability Distribution

  2. Chap 2

  3. Jury Selection Problem There are 60 women and 40 men waiting outside the courtroom in the jury pool. Assuming the probability of being selected for the jury is the same for each person, what is the probability that the 12 person jury selected will consist of 7 men and 5 women?

  4. Section 7.1 Properties of the Normal Distribution

  5. A probability density function (pdf) is an equation used to compute probabilities of continuous random variables. The total area under the graph of the equation over all possible values of the random variable must equal 1. The area under the graph of the density function over an interval represents the probability of observing a value of the random variable in that interval.

  6. “Probability Density Function” is the equation of the blue curve. This equation gives the “y” values of the curve as “x” moves from left to right. The “area under the curve” is the area between the curve (blue line) and the horizontal.

  7. Relative frequency histograms that are symmetric /bell-shaped are said to have the shape of a normal curve.

  8. If a continuous random variable is “normally distributed”, or has a “normal probability distribution”, then a rel freq histogram of that variable has the shape of a “normal” or symmetric bell-shaped curve

  9. Properties of the Normal Curve • 1. It is symmetric about its mean, μ. • 2. Mean = median = mode. The curve has a single maximum point at x =μ. • It has inflection points at μ± σ • The area under the curve is 1. • The area under the curve to the right of μ, as well as to the left of μ, equals 1/2.

  10. As “x” increases without bound (gets further from the mean), the graph approaches, but never reaches, the horizontal axis. • The Empirical Rule (68-95-99.7): Approximately 68% of the area under the normal curve lies between μ± 1σ; approx. 95% of the area lies between μ ± 2σ; and approx. 99.7% of the area lies betweenμ ± 3σ .

  11. A Normal Continuous Random Variable The data on the next slide represent the heights (in) of a random sample of 50 two-year old males. (a) Draw a histogram of the data using first class boundaries of 31.5 and 32.5 in. (b) Do you think that the variable: “x” = height of 2-year old males is normally distributed?

  12. HEIGHT (IN) OF TWO-YR OLD MALES 36.0 36.2 34.8 36.0 34.6 38.4 35.4 36.8 34.7 33.4 37.4 38.2 31.5 37.7 36.9 34.0 34.4 35.7 37.9 39.3 34.0 36.9 35.1 37.0 33.2 36.1 35.2 35.6 33.0 36.8 33.5 35.0 35.1 35.2 34.4 36.7 36.0 36.0 35.7 35.7 38.3 33.6 39.8 37.0 37.2 34.8 35.7 38.9 37.2 39.3

  13. In the next slide, we have a normal density curve superimposed over the histogram. How does the area of the rectangle corresponding to a height between 34.5 and 35.5 inches relate to the area under the curve between these two heights?

  14. Area under a Normal Curve Suppose that a random variable “x”is normally distributed with mean μ and standard deviation σ. The area under the normal curve for any interval of values of “x” (say, 34.5 – 35.5 in) represents either: the proportion of the population with that interval (range) of values or: the probability that a randomly selected individual from the population will have that range of values.

  15. EXAMPLE: Area Under a Normal Curve • Suppose, the weights of adult African giraffes are normally distributed with mean μ = 2200 pounds and standard deviation σ = 200 pounds. • Shade the area under the normal curve to the left of x = 2100 pounds. • (b) Suppose that the area under the normal curve to the left of x = 2100 pounds is 0.3085. Provide two (Proportion/Probability) interpretations of this result.

  16. EXAMPLE Area Under a Normal Curve Adult Giraffe: μ= 2200 pounds and σ = 200 pounds The proportion of giraffes whose weight is less than 2100 pounds is 0.3085 or 30.85% of the giraffe population. 2) The probability that a randomly selected giraffe weighs less than 2100 pounds is 0.3085.

  17. Section 7.2 Applications of the Normal Distribution

  18. Standardizing a Normal Random Variable Suppose that the random variable X is normally distributed with mean μ and standard deviation σ. Then the random variable is normally distributed with mean μ = 0 and standard deviation σ = 1.The random variable Z has a “standard” normal distribution.

  19. “Standard” Normal Distribution

  20. IQ scores can be modeled by a normal distribution with μ = 100 and σ = 15. An IQ score of 120, is 1.33 standard deviations above the mean.

  21. Normal Probability Accuracy For these probabilities, we require 4-decimal accuracy, so set your calculator to: Mode: Float: 4

  22. Table IV: the area under the standard normal curve to the left of z = 1.33 is 0.9082.

  23. Find the area to the right of z = 1.33.

  24. Areas Under the Standard Normal Curve Empirical Rule: 68-95-99.7

  25. Find the area under the standard normal curve to the left of z = – 0.38. Area to the left of z = – 0.38 is 0.3520.

  26. Find the area under the standard normal curve to the right of z = 1.25 Area right of 1.25 = 1 – area left of 1.25 = 1 – 0.8944 = 0.1056

  27. Find the area under the standard normal curve between z = –1.02 and z= 2.94 Area between z = –1.02 and 2.94 = (Area left of z = 2.94) – (area left of z = –1.02) = 0.9984 – 0.1539 = 0.8445

  28. TI-84 2:Distr: normcdf… (lo, up, mn, stddev) (using z-score): normcdf (-1,1) = 0.6827 normcdf (-3.49,-0.38) = 0.3517 normcdf (-1E99,-0.38) = 0.3520

  29. TI-84 2:Distr: normcdf… (lo, up, mn, stddev) If you wanted to know the probability of getting 120 or less on an IQ test whose mean is 100 and stddev is 15… • (using x-score) normcdf (0,120,100,15) = 0.9088 • (using z-score): normcdf (-1E99,1.333) = 0.9087 (using lo bd of z= -3.49 gives 0.9085)

  30. invNorm (area/prob , mean, stddev) Find the raw score/z-score that corresponds to on the standard IQ Test (100;15) • (using x-score) InvNorm (0.85 ,100,15) = 115.55 • (using z-score) InvNorm (0.85) = 1.0364

  31. TI-84 sample problems… • normcdf (-1.5,1.25) → 0.8275 • normcdf (0,133,100,15) → 0.9861 (89,133,100,15) → 0.7544 • invNorm (0.9861) → 2.2001 • invNorm (0.9861,100,15) → 133.0015 • normcdf (-1E99,1.25) → 0.8944

  32. Finding the Value of a Normal Variable The combined (verbal + quantitative) score on the GRE (Graduate Record Exam (GRE ~ to get accepted into graduate school) is normally distributed with mean=1049 and stddev =189 What is the raw test score for a student whose rank is at the 85th percentile?

  33. Value of a Normal Random Variable The z-score that corresponds to the 85th percentile is the z-score which has .8500 area to its left. TI-84 or Table V : InvNorm (0.8500) = 1.0364 So, this z-score is 1.0364. x = µ + zσ = 1049 + 1.0364(189) = 1244.88 or 1245 A person who scores 1245 on the GRE would rank in the 85thpercentile, or the prob a person scores 1245 on the GRE is 0.850

  34. Value of a Normal Random Variable Karlos, Inc. manufactures construction-grade steel rebar rods. Their length is normally distributed with a mean of 100 cm (1 m) and a standard deviation of 0.45 cm. Suppose Quality Control wants to accept 90% of all rods manufactured, but rebuild all rods outside that tolerance. Determine the min/max length of these rods that make up the middle 90% of all rods manufactured.

  35. Value of a Normal Random Variable InvNorm(0.05) = - 1.645 z1= –1.645 and z2 = 1.645 Area = 0.05 Area = 0.05 x1= µ + z1σ = 100 + (–1.645)(0.45) = 99.2598 cm OR InvNorm(0.05,100,0.45) = 99.2598 = 99.3 cm The steel rods that make up the middle 90% would have lengths between 99.3 cm and 100.7 cm.

  36. Section 7.3 Assessing Normality (Skip)

  37. Section 7.4 The Normal Approximation to the Binomial Probability Distribution

  38. Criteria for a Binomial Probability Experiment An experiment is said to be a binomial experiment if: 1. The experiment is performed “n” independent times. Each repetition is called a trial. Independence means that the outcome of one trial will not affect the outcome of the other trials. 2. For each trial, there are only two possible disjoint outcomes: Success / Failure (T/F; Yes/No, H/T, etc.) 3. The probability of success, “p” and the prob of failure “q”, arethe same for each trial of the experiment. Note: p + q =1 and q = 1- p.

  39. For a fixed prob of success “p”, as the number of trials “n”in a binomial experiment increases, the probability distribution of “x” becomes more nearly symmetric and bell-shaped. As a rule of thumb, if the variance = npq > 10, then the probability distribution will be approx normal (bell-shaped) and we can use “z” scores to predict probability of experiment outcomes.

  40. The Normal Approximation to the Binomial Probability Distribution If npq≥ 10, (stddev = ≥ 3.2) , the binomial random variable “x” is approximately normally distributed with : Mean: μX = np Std Dev: Note: “q” = (1- p)

  41. P(X = 18) ≈ P(17.5 <X< 18.5)

  42. P(X< 18) ≈ P(X< 18.5)

  43. Exact Probability Using Binomial: P(X ≤ a) Approximate ProbabilityUsing Normal: P(X ≤ a + 0.5)

  44. Exact Probability Using Binomial: P(X ≥ a) Approximate ProbabilityUsing Normal: P(X ≥ a – 0.5)

  45. Exact Probability Using Binomial: P(a ≤ X ≤ b) Approximate ProbabilityUsing Normal: P(a=0.5≤ X ≤ b+0.5)

  46. Using the Binomial Probability Distribution Function • 35% of all car-owning households have three or more cars. • In a sample of 400 car-owning households, what is the probability that fewer than 150 have three or more cars? P(x<150) ≈P(x<150.5)

More Related