The following are additional questions which are part of the
respective homework sets.
- Classify each of the following statements (which may or may not be true)
as either (D)escriptive or (I)nferential:
- 20% of plastic bottled water in Canada contains measurable amounts of
bisphenol A.
- Out of 30 plastic water bottles we measured, 6 bottles contained
measurable amounts of bisphenol A.
- 33.9% of adults in the U.S. are clinically obese.
- The mean age at diagnosis of self-reported diabetes in Canada is
46.823 years.
- In a 1991 LCDC General Social Survey of 472 Canadians, 68% of
diabetics were diagnosed after age 40.
- Suppose you wish to study whether people in rural communities in Canada
utilize family doctors (e.g., visits per year) more than people in urban
communities.
- What is the population in question?
- List the variables which need to be measured.
- For each variable, indicate its level of measurement and whether
it is a predictor (independent variable) or outcome (dependent variable).
- State the research question precisely in words and in notation as
we discussed in class.
- Discuss how you might do the sampling process. What are some steps
you could take to ensure a random sampling? Address both criteria for
random sampling. Ch8 of the textbook has further reading if you want
more ideas.
- Suppose you wish to study whether praying more (e.g., minutes per day)
reduces white blood cell count (cells per microlitre) in patients with leukaemia.
- What is the population in question?
- List the variables which need to be measured.
- For each variable, indicate its level of measurement and whether
it is a predictor (independent variable) or outcome (dependent variable).
- Suppose that in a study 70% of the participants are married and
40% of the participants consider their jobs to be high-stress.
Consider the probability that a participant in the study is married
and also has a high-stress job.
- What is the minimum possible value for this probability?
Draw a Venn diagram illustrating this situation.
- What is the maximum possible value for this probability?
Draw a Venn diagram illustrating this situation.
- Let the sample space S represent people born in Canada.
Let the event A represent people born in Alberta and B represent people born
in BC. Are the events A and B independent, in the statistical sense?
- In a study of Canadian nurses, say that 60% of the nurses are in urban
hospitals, and that one quarter of the nurses use prescription
anti-depressants on themselves. Out of all the nurses in the study,
20% are in hospitals and also on anti-depressants.
- For each of the three probabilities given (60%, 25%, 20%),
express the probability in notation (e.g., P(A)) and draw a
Venn diagram, shading in the relevant region
(draw three separate Venn diagrams).
- In this study, what is the chance that an urban-hospital nurse
is on anti-depressants?
- In this study, is being in an urban hospital independent
of being on anti-depressants? Why or why not?
- Come up with your own example (not one we have learned so far)
of two events which are independent.
Be sure to specify what the entire sample space is.