1 / 10

Chapter 14 - Inference for Regression

Chapter 14 - Inference for Regression. Paul M. Wilson, Jr. May 29, 2002 AP Statistics. Introduction - Chapter 3 All Over Again!.

zander
Download Presentation

Chapter 14 - Inference for Regression

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 14 - Inference for Regression Paul M. Wilson, Jr. May 29, 2002 AP Statistics

  2. Introduction - Chapter 3 All Over Again! • We use the linear regression model when a scatterplot shows a linear relationship between a quantitative explanatory variable “x” and a quantitative response variable “y”.

  3. Do the following when given a set of data: • Make a scatterplot plotting the explanatory variable “x” horizontally and the response variable “y” vertically. • Use a calculator to fit the LSRL to the data. • Look for outliers and influential observations. • Calculate the correlation “r” and its square.

  4. Don’t forget the equation for the LSRL! The equation to calculate resids is still the same! We have a standard error about the LSRL. Degrees of freedom! We have a confidence interval for regression slope. There are also standard hypotheses for no linear relationship. Equations to Remember in Linear Regression

  5. The Equations for Regression Inference • Equations for the LSRL, residuals, and the standard error about the LSRL:

  6. Equations Continued • We also have equations for degrees of freedom and the confidence interval: • We use n-2 degrees of freedom since we have two variables to observe.

  7. The null hypothesis states that there is no linear relationship and is written in the form of: The alternative states that there is in fact some linear relationship and can be written in one of 3 forms: The Null and Alternative Hypotheses

  8. 3 Basic Assumptions for Regression • The true relationship is linear : look at the scatterplot to check that the overall pattern is roughly linear. • The standard deviation of the response about the true line is the same everywhere. • The response varies normally about the true regression line.

  9. Quick Facts about the Confidence Interval • We use a confidence interval to estimate the mean response. • A confidence interval says that the interval obtained is correct a certain percentage of the time in repeated use. • The confidence interval for the mean response “u” is

  10. More advanced work in linear regression can be found throughout Chapter14!

More Related