Experimental Design B/C

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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Anomaly »

dxu46 wrote:
Jacobi wrote:
dxu46 wrote:
1. at least 3
2. at least 4
Actually, only 3 CVs are needed.
Oh, then they changed it, it was 4 last year.
Yes, if you look at the 2019 season rubric it'll say you only need 3 CVs now
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Jacobi »

dxu46 can go.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by dxu46 »

You test the affect of running speed on perspiration. You results are, for 4 mph, 67 mL, 69 mL, and 81 mL. For 6 mph, your results are 87, 82, and 91 mL. For 8 mph, your results are 101, 101, and 109 mL. List and calculate at least 6 useful statistics.

(disclaimer: this is a FICTIONAL experiment. The results are highly improbable, and the experiment is unlikely to be done. But the question is about statistics, not ideas.)
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Jacobi »

dxu46 wrote:You test the affect of running speed on perspiration. You results are, for 4 mph, 67 mL, 69 mL, and 81 mL. For 6 mph, your results are 87, 82, and 91 mL. For 8 mph, your results are 101, 101, and 109 mL. List and calculate at least 6 useful statistics.

(disclaimer: this is a FICTIONAL experiment. The results are highly improbable, and the experiment is unlikely to be done. But the question is about statistics, not ideas.)
Do they have to be all different?
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> 72 mL (= (67 + 69 + 81)/3), 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2)}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = max - min = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]MAD = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = (|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|) / 3 = 5.8 mL[/math], 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y})}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
Last edited by Jacobi on October 14th, 2018, 1:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by dxu46 »

Jacobi wrote:
dxu46 wrote:You test the affect of running speed on perspiration. You results are, for 4 mph, 67 mL, 69 mL, and 81 mL. For 6 mph, your results are 87, 82, and 91 mL. For 8 mph, your results are 101, 101, and 109 mL. List and calculate at least 6 useful statistics.

(disclaimer: this is a FICTIONAL experiment. The results are highly improbable, and the experiment is unlikely to be done. But the question is about statistics, not ideas.)
Do they have to be all different?
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> 72 mL (= (67 + 69 + 81)/3), 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2)}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = max - min = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]MAD = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = (|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|) / 3 = 5.8 mL[/math], 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y}}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
:o
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Jacobi »

Standard deviation measures what quality of a data distribution?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by OrigamiPlanet »

Jacobi wrote:Standard deviation measures what quality of a data distribution?
It measures the average variation that the actual values have from the mean value.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Jacobi »

OrigamiPlanet wrote:
Jacobi wrote:Standard deviation measures what quality of a data distribution?
It measures the average variation that the actual values have from the mean value.
Not exactly...
Try again.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F »

Jacobi wrote:
OrigamiPlanet wrote:
Jacobi wrote:Standard deviation measures what quality of a data distribution?
It measures the average variation that the actual values have from the mean value.
Not exactly...
Try again.
Wait, what's wrong with that answer? That's pretty much the intent of a standard deviation. Did you just want the spread of the distribution?

Edit: Also, correcting this because the mismatched parentheses bother me...
Jacobi wrote:
dxu46 wrote:You test the affect of running speed on perspiration. You results are, for 4 mph, 67 mL, 69 mL, and 81 mL. For 6 mph, your results are 87, 82, and 91 mL. For 8 mph, your results are 101, 101, and 109 mL. List and calculate at least 6 useful statistics.

(disclaimer: this is a FICTIONAL experiment. The results are highly improbable, and the experiment is unlikely to be done. But the question is about statistics, not ideas.)
Do they have to be all different?
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> 72 mL (= (67 + 69 + 81)/3), 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is, the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = max - min = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\textrm{MAD} = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = (|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|) / 3 = 5.8 mL[/math], 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y}}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
should be
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\frac{67+69+81}{3} =[/math] 72 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2)}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81 \Rightarrow[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = \textrm{max} - \textrm{min} = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]MAD = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = \frac{|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|}{3} =[/math] 5.8 mL, 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y})}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
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Re: Experimental Design B/C

Post by Jacobi »

UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:
Jacobi wrote:
OrigamiPlanet wrote:
It measures the average variation that the actual values have from the mean value.
Not exactly...
Try again.
Wait, what's wrong with that answer? That's pretty much the intent of a standard deviation. Did you just want the spread of the distribution?

Edit: Also, correcting this because the mismatched parentheses bother me...
Jacobi wrote:
dxu46 wrote:You test the affect of running speed on perspiration. You results are, for 4 mph, 67 mL, 69 mL, and 81 mL. For 6 mph, your results are 87, 82, and 91 mL. For 8 mph, your results are 101, 101, and 109 mL. List and calculate at least 6 useful statistics.

(disclaimer: this is a FICTIONAL experiment. The results are highly improbable, and the experiment is unlikely to be done. But the question is about statistics, not ideas.)
Do they have to be all different?
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> 72 mL (= (67 + 69 + 81)/3), 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is, the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = max - min = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\textrm{MAD} = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = (|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|) / 3 = 5.8 mL[/math], 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y}}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
should be
1. Mean Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\frac{67+69+81}{3} =[/math] 72 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph -> 104 mL
2. Standard Deviation Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]\sqrt{\frac{(67-72)^2 + (69 - 72)^2 + (81 - 72)^2)}{3}} =[/math] 7.6 mL, 6 mph -> 4.5 mL, 8 mph -> 4.6 mL
3. Median Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [b]Find middle of 3 values in order, that is the second-highest value:[/b] [math]67, \underline{69}, 81 \Rightarrow[/math] 69 mL, 6 mph -> 87 mL, 8 mph - > 101 mL
4. Range Perspiration (mL): 4 mph -> [math]R = \textrm{max} - \textrm{min} = 81-67 =[/math] 14 mL, 6 mph -> 9 mL, 8mph -> 8 mL.
5. Mean Absolute Deviation (mL): 4 mph -> [math]MAD = \frac{1}{n}\Sigma_i |x_i - \overline{x}| = \frac{|67 - 72.33| + |69 - 72.33| + |81 - 72.33|}{3} =[/math] 5.8 mL, 6 mph -> 3.1 mL, 8 mph -> 3.6 mL
6. Pearson Correlation between Hours and Milliliters: [math]r = \Sigma_i \frac{(x_i - \overline{x})(y_i - \overline{y})}{s_x s_y}[/math]
[math]\overline{x} = 6.00[/math]
[math]\overline{y} = 87.6[/math]
[math]s_y = 40.9[/math]
[math]s_x = 4.9[/math]
.
.
.
[math]r = 0.938[/math]
What's wrong is the standard deviation measures the typical, not average, deviation from the mean. It's a fine but critical distinction. What parentheses did you correct?
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