AP Statistics Curriculum 2007 Normal Critical

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====Human Weights and Heights====
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Human [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_weight weights] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_height heights] are known to be approximately Normally distributed. Look at the [[SOCR_Data_Dinov_020108_HeightsWeights |SOCR Weighs and Heights Dataset and use the [[SOCR_EduMaterials_Activities_Histogram_Graphs | SOCR Charts]] to validate these statements based on this sample dataset.
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| Height (in.)  || 61.0 || 62.5 || 63.0 || 64.0 || 64.5 || 65.0 || 66.5 || 67.0 || 68.0 || 68.5 || 70.5
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* Suppose the heights of college women are approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 65 inches and a standard deviation of 2 inches. If a randomly chosen college woman is at the 10<sup>th</sup> percentile (shortest 10% for women) in height for college women, then what is the largest height closest to hers?
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Revision as of 00:00, 2 February 2008

Contents

General Advance-Placement (AP) Statistics Curriculum - Nonstandard Normal Distribution & Experiments: Finding Critical Values

Nonstandard Normal Distribution & Experiments: Finding Scores (Critical Values)

In addition to being able to compute probability (p) values, we often need to estimate the critical values of the Normal distribution for a given p-value.

  • The back and forth linear transformations converting between Standard and General Normal distributions are alwasy useful in such analyses (Let X denotes General (X\sim N(\mu,\sigma^2)) and Z denotes Standard (X\sim N(0,1)) Normal random variables):
Z = {X-\mu \over \sigma} converts general normal scores to standard (Z) values.
X = μ + Zσ converts standard scores to general normal values.

Examples

This Distributions help-page may be useful in understanding SOCR Distribution Applet.

Textbook prices

Suppose the amount of money college students spend each semester on textbooks is normally distributed with a mean of $195 and a standard deviation of $20. If we ask a random college students from this population how much he spent on books this semester, what is the maximum dollar amount that would guagantee she spends only as much as 30% of the population? (P(X < 184.512) = 0.3)

You can also do this problem exactly using the SOCR high-precision Nornal Distribution Calculator. If zo = − 0.5243987892920383, then P( − zo < Z < zo) = 0.4 and P(Z<z_o)=0.3. Thus, xo = μ + zoσ = 195 + ( − 0.5243987892920383) * 20 = 184.512024214159234.

Human Weights and Heights

Human weights and heights are known to be approximately Normally distributed. Look at the [[SOCR_Data_Dinov_020108_HeightsWeights |SOCR Weighs and Heights Dataset and use the SOCR Charts to validate these statements based on this sample dataset.

  • Suppose the heights of college women are approximately Normally distributed with a mean of 65 inches and a standard deviation of 2 inches. If a randomly chosen college woman is at the 10th percentile (shortest 10% for women) in height for college women, then what is the largest height closest to hers?

References




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