1 / 52

Stats/Methods I

Stats/Methods I. JEOPARDY. Jeopardy. Correlation. Regression. Z-Scores. Probability. Surprise. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $ 200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400. $500. $500. $500. $500. $500. Correlation--$100.

Download Presentation

Stats/Methods I

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. Stats/Methods I JEOPARDY

  2. Jeopardy Correlation Regression Z-Scores Probability Surprise $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500

  3. Correlation--$100 • When two variables tend to move in the same direction • answer

  4. Correlation--$200 • A perfect correlation is indicated by a correlation coefficient of • answer

  5. Correlation--$300 • On a scatterplot, a negative correlation looks like this • answer

  6. Correlation--$400 • Compute this to determine whether a consistent relationship exists between two rank-order measures. • answer

  7. Correlation--$500 • Conceptually, the Pearson correlation coefficient is computed by dividing _________ by _________. • answer

  8. Regression--$100 • When drawing the regression line, what is the minimum number of points you must compute and plot? • answer

  9. Regression--$200 • In the regression equation, “a” stands for __________. • answer

  10. Regression--$300 • In the regression equation, a negative _____ means that Y decreases when X increases. • answer

  11. Regression--$400 • In general, a linear relationship between x and y can be expressed by this equation • answer

  12. Regression--$500 • The variable you will use to make predictions goes on the __axis and the variable you’re interested in predicting goes on the __axis. • answer

  13. Z-Scores--$100 • The z-score that would indicate a score located 2 standard deviation units below the mean. • answer

  14. Z-Scores--$200 • If a person earns a score that is equal to the population mean, that person’s z-score will be ___. • answer

  15. Z-Scores--$300 • The distribution of z-scores always has a standard deviation of ___. • answer

  16. Z-Scores--$400 • The two pieces of population information you need in order to transform a raw score into a z-score. • answer

  17. Z-Scores--$500 • If the original distribution is negatively skewed, the shape of the distribution after a z-score transformation will be ___________. • answer

  18. Probability--$100 • In general, the probability of A is computed by taking __________ and dividing by ________. • answer

  19. Probability--$200 • For the definition of probability to be accurate, the outcomes must be obtained by a process called ___________. • answer

  20. Probability--$300 • Provides a complete listing of z-scores and their corresponding proportions of the normal distribution. • answer

  21. Probability--$400 • The _____ always corresponds to the larger part of the distribution, whether it is on the right-hand side or the left-hand side of the distribution. • answer

  22. Probability--$500 • When finding the ______ for a particular score, we are always looking for the proportion of the distribution to the _____ of the x value. • answer

  23. Surprise--$100 • In a binomial situation, if p = .75, then q = ___. • answer

  24. Surprise--$200 • Another name for a non-directional test. • answer

  25. Surprise--$300 • Gives the proportion of variability in y that can be explained by the variability in x. • answer

  26. Surprise--$400 • The binomial distribution is always a _____ histogram,while the normal distribution is a ________, smooth curve. • answer

  27. Surprise--$500 • When ___ and ___ are both at least 10, the binomial distribution is closely approximated by a normal distribution. • answer

  28. Correlation--$100 • A: What is a positive correlation? • Back to board

  29. Correlation--$200 • A: What is 1 (positive & negative)? • Back to board

  30. Correlation--$300 • A: What is an envelope moving down from left to right? • Back to board

  31. Correlation--$400 • A: What is the Spearman correlation? • Back to board

  32. Correlation--$500 • A: What is • Degree to which x & Y vary together • Degree to which x and y vary separately • Back to board

  33. Regression--$100 • A: What is 2? • Back to board

  34. Regression--$200 • A: What is the y-intercept? • Back to board

  35. Regression--$300 • A: What is slope? • Back to board

  36. Regression--$400 • A: What is • y predicted=bx+a ? • Back to board

  37. Regression--$500 • A: What is x and y (in that order)? • Back to board

  38. Z-Scores--$100 • A: What is z = -2.0 ? • Back to board

  39. Z-Scores--$200 • A: What is z = 0.00 ? • Back to board

  40. Z-Scores--$300 • A: What is 1? • Back to board

  41. Z-Scores--$400 • A: What are the population mean and the population standard deviation? • Back to board

  42. Z-Scores--$500 • A: What is the same—negatively skewed? • Back to board

  43. Probability--$100 • A: What is • # of outcomes classified as A • total # of possible outcomes • Back to board

  44. Probability--$200 • A: What is random sampling? • Back to board

  45. Probability--$300 • A: What is the unit normal table? • Back to board

  46. Probability--$400 • A: What is the body? • Back to board

  47. Probability--$500 • A: What is the percentile rank and left? • Back to board

  48. Surprise--$100 • A: What is .25? • Back to board

  49. Surprise--$200 • A: What is a two-tailed test? • Back to board

  50. Surprise--$300 • A: What is the coefficient of determination (r2)? • Back to board

More Related