Chapter 5.1 Point Estimation - 9march2016
Chapter 5.1 Point Estimation - 9march2016
Chapter 5.1 -
POINT ESTIMATION
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Prepared by Razana Alwee / Updated by Dewi Nasien
Preview
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What Are Point and Interval
Estimates of Population
Parameters?
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Point Estimate
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Interval Estimate
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Point Estimate vs Interval Estimate
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Point Estimation
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Properties of Point Estimators
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Properties of Point Estimators
Unbiased, since
the distribution is
Biased, since the centered at the
distribution is true value
NOT centered at
the true value
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Properties of Point Estimators
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Interval Estimation
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Confidence Interval (CI)
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Confidence Interval (CI)
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The Sampling Distribution of the
Sample Proportion
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Margin of Error
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Confidence Interval Estimator for
Proportion
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The General Properties for
Sampling Distributions of p
1. pˆ p
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The Large-Sample
Confidence Interval for p
pˆ(1 pˆ)
pˆ (z critical value)
n
This is also called the margin of
error/bound on the error estimation
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Three Commonly Used
Confidence Levels
pˆ (1 pˆ )
pˆ 2.58
n
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Three Commonly Used
Confidence Levels
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Example: Which You Pay Higher
Prices to Protect the Environment?
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Solution
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Solution
518
p̂ 0.45
1154
(0.45)(0.55)
SE 0.015
1154
p̂ 1.96(SE) 1.96(0.015)
0.45 0.03 (0.42, 0.48)
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Example
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Solution
b) 95% CI: =
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Exercise 1
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Exercise 2
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Confidence Interval Estimator for
Mean when is Known
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Interval Estimator for Mean
when is Known
x (z critical value)
n
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Four Commonly Used
Confidence Levels
Confidence Level
cut & keep handy!
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Example
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Solution
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Solution
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Exercise
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Confidence Interval Estimator for
Mean when is Unknown
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Interval Estimator for Mean
when is Unknown
x
t
s
n
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Important Properties of t
Distributions
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Important Properties of t
Distributions
s
x (t critical value)
n
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Solution
23 22 21 24 19 20 20
x = 21.29 and s = 1.80
df = 7 – 1 = 6
s
x (t critical value)
n
1.80
21.29 3.71 (18.77, 23.81)
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a) Construct and interpret a 95% confidence interval for the mean home
range of female black bears in this logged forest.
b) The typical home range of females in forests with no logging is 20 . Based
on the confidence interval from part (a), do you think that the mean home
range size of females in this logged forest could be the same as the mean
home range size in non-logged forests? Explain, using appropriate
statistical terminology.
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Exercise
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