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CLASS TOPICS

Ca Foscari University of Venice

SYLLABUS OF STATISTICS 6C 2013-14


Prof. M. Romanazzi
March 8, 2014

Class Topics

References are given in parentheses.

1.1

Data analysis

Frequency distributions Summarizing data by frequency tables. Notion of mode. Categorical and
numerical data. Stem-and-leaf presentation. Grouping numerical data into intervals. Frequency vs
density. Histogram as a density curve diagram. Shape of frequency distributions. Some common
shapes: unimodal vs bimodal, symmetric vs asymmetric, increasing vs decreasing, uniform, normal.
Interpreting shape. (Ross, Ch. 2 and 3)
Quantiles and boxplot Sample quantiles. More specific examples: minimum and maximum, range
and inter-quantile range, median and quartiles. Box-and-whiskers plot. Tukeys outlier labeling
rule. (Ross, Ch. 3)
Mean, standard deviation and the normal curve Describing location and dispersion. Unimodal
and symmetric distributions: mean, variance and standard deviation. Interpreting mean and standard deviation. Mean and standard deviation vs quantiles. Normal distributions. Areas of central
intervals under the normal curve. Assessing accuracy of normal approximation to empirical histograms. (Ross, Ch. 3)
Scatter plots and linear correlation coefficient Bivariate numerical data. Using scatter plots to
graphically assess the features of joint distributions: location, dispersion, shape. Covariance and
linear correlation coefficient. Using the linear correlation coefficient as a diagnostic of the strength
of linear relationship (Ross, Ch. 2 and 3)
Least squares line Fitting a line to bivariate data. Predicted values of the response variable and
errors. Estimates of the coefficients by minimization of the sum of squared errors. Coefficient of
determination. Role of linear correlation coefficient. (Ross, Ch. 12: 12.1 - 12.3, 12.8, 12.9)
Suggested exercises: Ch. 2 (review section): 1-4, 8, 9, 12, 14, 16; Ch. 3 (review section): 2, 6, 8,
12, 13; Ch. 12.2: 3-5, Ch. 12.3: 8, 10, 12, 13, 15, Ch. 12.8: 1, 3 (except part d.), 6 (except part
d.), Ch. 12.9: 1-5.
Probability theory, random variables and probability distributions, summaries of probability distributions (expectation, variance and standard deviation, percentiles) and basic probability models (binomial,
hypergeometric, normal) are required for the second part of the course. (Ross, Ch. 4, 5, 6)

1.2

Probability distribution of sample statistics

Random sampling. The standard model of analysis of random variables associated to random sampling.
Basic sample statistics: sample average and sample proportion, sample variance and sample standard
deviation. Expectation and variance of basic statistics. Finding the probability distribution of a sample

TEXTBOOKS

statistic. Exact vs asymptotic distribution. Central limit theorem. Asymptotic normality. Law of large
numbers. (Ross, Ch. 7)
Suggested exercises: Ch. 7 (review section): 1-6, 9, 11, 12.

1.3

Estimation

Estimation of the population mean and the population proportion. Using the (plug-in) standard error to
evaluate the sampling error. Unbiased estimators. Confidence intervals for the population mean and the
population proportion. t distribution. Comparing t distribution to standard normal distribution. Using
t percentiles to obtain confidence intervals for the population mean of normal data. (Ross, Ch. 8)
Suggested exercises: Ch. 8 (review section): 3-9, 12-15.

1.4

Test of hypotheses

Statistical hypotheses and test statistics. Decisional approach, type 1 and type 2 errors, partition of the
sample space into rejection region and its complement. The approach based on p-value. One - sided and
two - sided tests of population mean. One - sided and two - sided tests of population proportion. (Ross,
Ch. 9)
Suggested exercises: Ch. 9.4: 1-4, 6, 12, Ch. 9.5: 1-3, 5, 8, 9, 12, 14, Ch. 9 (review section): 2, 5, 6,
14.

Textbooks

Reference textbook is
Ross, Sheldon M., Introductory Statistics, 2nd edition, Elsevier, 2005 (or more recent editions).

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