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Chapter 3 Review: Examining Relationships

Chapter 3 Review: Examining Relationships. Karey Duane Deepak Jhol Sean Eikhoff Dylan Fryar. The Big Idea. The relationships between two variables can be strongly influenced by other variables that are lurking in the background. Who are the individuals described by the data?

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Chapter 3 Review: Examining Relationships

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  1. Chapter 3 Review:Examining Relationships Karey Duane Deepak Jhol Sean Eikhoff Dylan Fryar

  2. The Big Idea • The relationships between two variables can be strongly influenced by other variables that are lurking in the background. • Who are the individuals described by the data? • What are the variables ? • Why was the data gathered? • When, where, how, and by whom was the data produced?

  3. Vocabulary You Need to Know • Response variable- measures the outcome of a study • Explanatory variable- helps explain or influence changes in a response variable • Scatterplot- shows the relationship between two quantitative variables measured on the same individuals • Outlier- an observation that lies outside the overall pattern of the other observations. • Positive Association- When the above-average values of one tend to accompany above-average values of the other, and below-average values also tend to occur together. • Negative Association- When above-average values of one tend to accompany below average values of the other, and vice versa. • Correlation- measures the direction and strength of the linear relationship between two quantitative variables, usually written as r.

  4. Vocabulary You Need to Know • Regression Line- a line that describes how a response variable y changes as an explanatory variable x changes. • Extrapolation- the use of a regression line for prediction outside the range of values of the explanatory variable x used to obtain the line; often not accurate. • Least-Squares Regression Line- the line that makes the sum of the squared vertical distances of the data points from the line as small as possible. • Residuals- the differences between the observed and predicted values of y. • Coefficient of Determination- r2is the fraction of the variance of one variable that is explained by the least-squares regression on the other variable. • Lurking Variable- a variable that is not among the explanatory or response variables in a study and yet may influence the interpretation of relationships among those variables.

  5. Key Topics Covered in this Chapter • Data • Recognize whether each variable is quantitative or categorical • Identify the explanatory or response variables in situations where one variable explains or influences another • Scatterplots • Make a scatterplot to display the relationship between two quantitative variables. Place the explanatory variable (if any) on the x-axis. • Describe the direction, form, and strength of the overall pattern of a scatterplot. • Correlation • Using a calculator, find the correlation r between two quantitative variables • Know the basic properties of correlation • Regression Lines • Explain what the slope b and the y intercept a mean in the equation ŷ=a + bx of a regression line. • Using a calculator, find the least-squares regression line for predicting values of a response variable y from an explanatory variable x from data. • Find the slope and intercept of the least-squares regression line from the means and standard deviations of x and y and their correlation • Use the regression line to predict y for a given x. Recognize extrapolation and be aware of its dangers. • Assessing Model Quality • Calculate the residuals and plot them against the explanatory variable x or against other variables. Recognize unusual patterns. • Use r2to describe how much of the variation in one variable can be accounted for by a straight-line relationship with another variable • Recognize outliers and potentially influential observations from a scatterplot with the regression line drawn on it. • Interpreting Correlation and Regression • Understand both r and the least-squares regression line can be strongly influenced by a few extreme observations. • Recognize possible lurking variables that may explain the correlation between two variables x and y.

  6. Formulas You Should Know

  7. Calculator Key Strokes Make a Scatterplot Perform a Regression

  8. Helpful Hints Steps for Ch. 3 Problems: • Plot data on a scatterplot • Interpret what you see; direction, form, strength, outliers, etc. • Numerical Summary; x, y, sx ,sy, and r • Mathematical Model/Regression Line • How well does it fit? Residuals and r2

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