Statistics Weekly 2: Finding Measures of Center on
Transcription
Statistics Weekly 2: Finding Measures of Center on
Statistics Weekly 2: Finding Measures of Center on the Calculator Name:___________________ First a little review… Review of Stats Weekly 11) What are the three measures of center? 2) What is an outlier? 3) Which measure of center is resistant to outliers? Review of Section 1.5Enter the following data lists into your calculator: The reported length of the 2008 KML Statistics students’ feet in centimeters: L1: { 23, 33, 27, 25, 24, 29, 25, 23, 27, 25, 31, 29, 31, 29, 31, 26, 30} Number of “hits” to the stats class website by 40 students at Cal Poly: L2: {20, 37, 4, 20, 0, 84, 14, 36, 5, 331, 19, 0, 0, 22, 3, 13, 14, 36, 4, 0, 18, 8, 0, 26, 4, 0, 5, 23, 19, 7, 12, 8, 13, 16, 21, 7, 13, 12, 8, 42} The percent of copper content in Bidri art from India in England’s Victoria and Albert Museum: L3: {2.0, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.6, 2.7, 2.7, 2.8, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.3, 3.4, 3.4, 3.6, 3.6, 3.6, 3.6, 3.7, 4.4, 4.6, 4.7, 4.8, 5.3, 10.1} (Remember to double-check that you typed the data in correctly!!) Now for the new stuff…. Finding the mean, median, and midrange (and other statistics) of large data sets is very time consuming. Because computers and calculators can process data very quickly, these computing devices have revolutionized the data analysis world! There are a few ways you can use the statistical features of your calculator to find these measures of center. 1) Using the LIST menu: 1) You should already have the data you want to work with in a list on your calculator. We’ll use the data you entered in the review. 2) To perform operations on lists of data on the calculator, hit 2nd and STAT to enter the LIST menu. 3) The LIST “NAMES” menu allows you to call up any list stored on your calculator. This includes lists L1 through L6 as well as those you’ve created on your own. 4) The LIST “OPS” menu has a number of list operations you can perform, but we will not use these for now. 5) The LIST “MATH” menu has what we need right now. 6) min( and max( are used to find the minimum and maximum of a list. (Remember you can call up L1 by pressing 2nd “1” or LIST “NAMES”1.) Try it! 7) mean(, median(, and sum( are used to find the mean, median, or sum of a list. (Remember, you can get L2 by pressing 2nd “2” or LIST “NAMES”2.) Note: The “sum” is Σx for the list. Try it! 8) The calculator does not have a midrange command, but you could type in the command above to find the midrange of list 2! ☺ Try it! 9) You could also find the midrange by typing in the commands as in part 6 above, then use the numbers to find the midrange. Here’s the midrange for list 1. 2) Using 1-Var Stats: 1) Finding the measures of center one at a time is also time consuming. To find them all at once, use the “1-Var Stats” command. First hit the “STAT” button. 2) Then go over to the CALC menu. You will use this menu often, but the only command we want right now is the first one – “1-Var Stats”. 3) To have the calculator find all of the statistics on a single list, call up the “1-Var Stats” command followed by the name of the list you want the statistics about. Here we’ll use L2. 4) Notice the calculator gives the mean as x . It also gives Σx, and the sample size (n). Remember ∑x that x = n 5) Note there is a down arrow on the screen. If you hit the down arrow on you calculator, you will scroll the screen down to show the rest of the 1-Var Stats… 6) Scrolling down gives you the min, max, and median for the data list. You can find the midrange using the values of the min and max. (We’ll use Q1 and Q3 in a future statistics weekly.) Homework: Use your calculator to find the mean, median, and midrange of the following data. Use the correct mathematical symbols with your answers as you did in the first Statistics weekly. Put the data into the lists indicated (keep the practice data in L1-L3 too): 1) The time in seconds for oil rig workers to escape during fire drill practice: L4: {389, 356, 359, 363, 375, 424, 325, 394, 402, 373, 373, 370, 364, 366, 364, 325, 339, 393, 392, 369, 374, 359, 356, 403, 334, 397} 2) The percentage of juice lost after thawing frozen strawberries: L5: {46, 51, 44, 50, 33, 46, 60, 41, 55, 46, 53, 53, 42, 44, 50, 54, 46, 41, 48} 3) The cadence (strides per second) of 20 healthy men: L6: {.95, .85, .92, .95, .93, .86, 1.00, .92, .85, .81, .78, .93, .93, 1.05, .93, 1.06, 1.06, .96 .81, .96} 4) Give the Σx for each of the lists of data from problems1-3 (lists 4-6). 5) In the examples, the mean, median, and midrange for L2 was given on the calculator screen. Rewrite each of those values below. Which of these measures of center should be the one reported as the average number of “hits” to the website? Why? Other cool stuff your calculator can do: 2) Once you use “1-Var Stats” for a list, all of the statistics that are calculated for a list are stored in the calculator’s memory (until 1Var Stats is run again). You can call up these values from the VARS #5:Statistics menu 1) The SortA( and SortD( commands will sort a list for you –either ascending or descending. This will order your data so you can manually find the median. You can also view a list on the home screen by calling up its name and hitting enter. Use the left and right arrows to scroll through it. Here you can call up “n”, x , min, max, and Σx. You can find the mean by using the formula: ∑ x ! (Note: I ran 1-Var x= n Stats L1 first for these results…)
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