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Lecture 26 - Sampling Distribution Proportion PDF

This document discusses the sampling distribution of a sample proportion. It begins by defining a sampling distribution as the distribution of values of a statistic over all possible samples of a given size from a population. It then provides examples of computing the sampling distribution for sample proportions of various sizes. It introduces the Central Limit Theorem for proportions, stating that the sampling distribution of a sample proportion will be approximately normal for large enough sample sizes. It concludes with applications of these concepts, such as calculating the probability of observing certain sample proportions given population values.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
197 views

Lecture 26 - Sampling Distribution Proportion PDF

This document discusses the sampling distribution of a sample proportion. It begins by defining a sampling distribution as the distribution of values of a statistic over all possible samples of a given size from a population. It then provides examples of computing the sampling distribution for sample proportions of various sizes. It introduces the Central Limit Theorem for proportions, stating that the sampling distribution of a sample proportion will be approximately normal for large enough sample sizes. It concludes with applications of these concepts, such as calculating the probability of observing certain sample proportions given population values.

Uploaded by

sound05
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Sampling Distribution of a Sample Proportion

Lecture 26 Section 8.4 Robb T. Koether


Hampden-Sydney College

Mon, Mar 5, 2012

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Outline

Computing the Sampling Distribution of p

The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Applications

Assignment

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Outline

Computing the Sampling Distribution of p

The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Applications

Assignment

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Sampling Distributions

Denition (Sampling Distribution of a Statistic)


The sampling distribution of a statistic is the distribution of values of that statistic over all possible samples of a given size n from the population. We may sample with or without replacement. For our purposes, it will be simpler to sample with replacement.

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The Sample Proportion

for sample sizes of We will work out the sampling distribution for p 1, 2, and 3. for sample Then I will show you the sampling distribution for p sizes of 4, 5, and 10.

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Example

Suppose that 45% of all people approve of President Obamas performance. Suppose that we select one person at random. We may diagram the 2 possibilities.

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Example

Y 0.45

0.55 N

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Example

Now we take a sample of 2 people, sampling with replacement. . Find the sampling distribution of p

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Example
Y YY 2 (0.45)2 = 0.2025

0.45 Y 0.45 0.55

YN

1 (0.45)(0.55) = 0.2475

0.45 0.55 N 0.55

NY

1 (0.55)(0.45) = 0.2475

NN

0 (0.55)2 = 0.3025

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Example

Let x be the number of people (out of 2) who strong disapprove of President Obamas performance. is The probability distribution of p ) p P (p 0 1/2 1 0.2025 0.4950 0.3025

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Example

Now we take a sample of 3 people, sampling with replacement. . Find the sampling distribution of p

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Example

0.45 0.45 Y 0.45 0.55 N 0.55 0.45 0.45 0.55 N 0.45 0.55 N 0.55 Y 0.55 0.45 Y 0.55

YYY

3 (0.45)3 = 0.0911

N Y

YYN YNY

2 (0.45)2(0.55) = 0.1114 2 (0.45)(0.55)(0.45) = 0.1114

N Y

YNN NYY

1 (0.45)(0.55)2 = 0.1361 2 (0.55)(0.45)2 = 0.1114

N Y

NYN NNY

1 (0.55)(0.45)(0.55) = 0.1361 1 (0.55)2(0.45) = 0.1114

NNN

0 (0.55)3 = 0.1664

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Example

be the sample proportion of people who strong disapprove Let p of President Obamas performance. is The sampling distribution of p ) p P (p 0 1/3 2/3 1 0.1664 0.4084 0.3341 0.0911

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Samples of Size n = 4

If we sample 4 people, then the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is ) P (p p 0 0.0915 1/4 0.2995 2/4 0.3675 3/4 0.2005 1 0.0410

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Samples of Size n = 5

If we sample 5 people, then the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is ) p P (p 0 0.0503 1/5 0.2059 2/5 0.3369 3/5 0.2757 4/5 0.1128 1 0.0185

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Samples of Size n = 6

If we sample 6 people, then the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is ) p P (p 0 0.0277 1/6 0.1359 2/6 0.2780 3/6 0.3032 4/6 0.1861 5/6 0.0609 1 0.0083

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Samples of Size n = 10
If we sample 10 people, then the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is
p 0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70 0.80 0.90 1.00 ) P (p 0.0025 0.0207 0.0763 0.1665 0.2384 0.2340 0.1596 0.0746 0.0229 0.0042 0.0003

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Outline

Computing the Sampling Distribution of p

The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Applications

Assignment

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The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Theorem (The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions)


For any population and any sample size, the sampling distribution has the following mean and standard deviation: of p p = p p = p (1 p ) . n

is approximately Furthermore, the sampling distribution of p normal, provided n is large enough.

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The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

The Sample Size


n is large enough if np 5 and n(1 p) 5. If n is small, then we have to work out the distribution by hand.

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Outline

Computing the Sampling Distribution of p

The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Applications

Assignment

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Applications

Suppose that 60% of all high-school students own a cell phone. If we survey 3 high-school students, how likely is it that we will nd that at least 2 of them own a cell phone?

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Applications

Suppose that 60% of all high-school students own a cell phone. If we survey 150 high-school students, how likely is it that we will nd that at least 65% of them own a cell phone?

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Applications

is normal with If p = 0.60 and our sample size is n = 150, then p = 0 . 60 and mean p p = (0.60)(0.40) = 0.0016 = 0.04. 150

0.65. We want to know the probability that p

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Applications

10

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

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Applications

10

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

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Applications

is greater than 0.65 is The probability that p normalcdf(.65,E99,.60,.04) = 0.1056.

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Applications

What if our sample size were 600 instead of 150? is normal with mean p Then p = 0.60 and p = (0.60)(0.40) = 0.0004 = 0.02. 600

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Applications

20

15

10

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

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Applications

20

15

10

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

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Applications

is greater than 0.65 is The probability that p normalcdf(.65,E99,.60,.02) = 0.0062.

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


A student takes a math placement test with 25 multiple-choice questions.

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


A student takes a math placement test with 25 multiple-choice questions. Each question has 5 choices.

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


A student takes a math placement test with 25 multiple-choice questions. Each question has 5 choices. If a student guesses at each answer, what will his score most likely be?

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


A student takes a math placement test with 25 multiple-choice questions. Each question has 5 choices. If a student guesses at each answer, what will his score most likely be? If a student scores 10 out of 25, can we be sure that he did not guess at all 25 answers?

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


If he guesses at all 25 answers, then the probability of getting any one answer correct is p = 0.20. . The proportion that he actually gets correct is p

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


If he guesses at all 25 answers, then the probability of getting any one answer correct is p = 0.20. . The proportion that he actually gets correct is p is normal with mean 0.20 and standard The distribution of p (0.20)(0.80) deviation = 0.04. 25

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


If he guesses at all 25 answers, then the probability of getting any one answer correct is p = 0.20. . The proportion that he actually gets correct is p is normal with mean 0.20 and standard The distribution of p (0.20)(0.80) deviation = 0.04. 25 is almost If we allow three standard deviations each way, then p certainly at least 0.08 and at most 0.32.

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Guessing on a Test

Example (Guessing on a Test)


If he guesses at all 25 answers, then the probability of getting any one answer correct is p = 0.20. . The proportion that he actually gets correct is p is normal with mean 0.20 and standard The distribution of p (0.20)(0.80) deviation = 0.04. 25 is almost If we allow three standard deviations each way, then p certainly at least 0.08 and at most 0.32. That represents from 2 to 8 correct answers.

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Outline

Computing the Sampling Distribution of p

The Central Limit Theorem for Proportions

Applications

Assignment

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Assignment

Homework
Read Sections 8.1 - 8.2, pages 499 - 508. Exercises 7 - 14, page 526.

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