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Statistics

Statistics. Entering numeric data. On your iclicker . You will be told when a numeric input is required Press blue button to change mode. Use the “up and down” arrow keys at the top to increase or decrease the number. Use the “left and right” arrow keys to move the cursor.

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Statistics

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  1. Statistics

  2. Entering numeric data • On your iclicker. • You will be told when a numeric input is required • Press blue button to change mode. • Use the “up and down” arrow keys at the top to increase or decrease the number. • Use the “left and right” arrow keys to move the cursor. • Press “send” when you have entered the desired answer.

  3. Trial run • Starting now, enter a number in your head between 0 and 99. • Press send when you are done.

  4. Clicker question • Enter your height to the nearest inch. • For example if your height is 5’10” then enter 70 since

  5. Clicker Q version 2 • Enter which range your height falls in: • A) • B) • C) • D) • E)

  6. What does the mean mean? • Numbers their mean value is their sum divided by N,

  7. What is the mean height of an American president? • X: a president’s height. Its values are: • 64,66,66,67,67,67,68,68,68,68,68.5,69,69,69.5,70,70,70,70,70.5,71,71,71,71,71.5,72,72,72,72,72,72,72,72,73,73,74,74,74,74,74.5,74.5,75,76 • N=42 • Mean=(64+2x66+3x67+4x68+68.5+2x69+69.5+5x70+70.5+4x71+71.5+8x72+2x73+4x74+2x74.5+75+76)/42=70.69

  8. What does the mean miss? Average height of a human, on average, has increased with time. Data collected over a long period of time can exhibit a trend. A process that is used to represent evolution of some random value over a period of time is called a stochastic process.

  9. Histogram of president heights

  10. President heights vs time

  11. Other time-dependent statistics: sex ratio

  12. 2012 Olympian heights

  13. The mean is not always representative of a typical value.

  14. What does the median mean? • Given numbers x1 ,…, xN their MEDIAN is the number that is less than half the numbers and greater than half the numbers. • If there is an even number of samples, the mean is usually the average of the two middle values. • What is the median height for a U.S. president?

  15. Clicker question: what is the median height of the first 42 us presidents?

  16. Household income in the United States

  17. Mean and median household incomes • Compute the mean household income based on the data above • Compute the median based on the data above.

  18. Variance • The variance of numbers x1 ,…, xNis the sum of the squares of their differences from their mean, divided by N-1. • The sample deviation is the square root of the variance.

  19. Which olympian are you most like?

  20. Covariance • Covariance is a measure of how much two variables vary together.

  21. Body mass index

  22. Formula for BMI

  23. Clicker question • What is your BMI (round to the nearest whole number). Enter as numerical input.

  24. The case of Jackie Jeschelnig

  25. Height: 5'9" (175 cm) • Olympic Weight: 203 lbs (92 kg) • BMI=92/(1.75)^2 =30.04

  26. BMI is correlated with body fat

  27. Are tall people smarter? • How tall is Randy Newman?

  28. why?

  29. Other controversial correlations: height and intelligence and pay • Height and intelligence • Why are tall people smarter? • Height and income • Height, income and intelligence • Best revenge is living long

  30. Health statistics • The Centers for Disease Control web site has a lot of data on various health statistics for the U.S. • Example: Is obesity a problem in the U.S.?

  31. Exercises • Compute the average height, average weight, median height, median weight, variance of the heights, and variance of the weights from the following data taken from the following source • Heights and weights data

  32. Names:__________ ___________ __________

  33. Exercise 2 • For each individual in the previous table, compute the BMI of that individual.

  34. Exercise 3 • For each of the Olympic athletes in the following table taken from fatchic compute the athlete’s BMI. • What are the average heights and weights for the athletes? • What is the variance in heights and weights of these athletes?

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