Part I: Exploring and Understanding Data
Chapter 2: Displaying and Describing Categorical Datapages 14 - 22
- Frequency Tables record totals and category names
- Table 2.2 pg. 16 where the categories are ticket class on the Titanic using ______
- Table 2.3 pg. 16 where the categories are ticket class on the Titanic using ______
- Bar Charts display the distribution of a categorical variable, showing counts of each category next to each other for easy comparison like in Figure 2.3 pg.17
- They should have small spaces between the bars to indicate these are free standing bars that could be ______in any order
- If we wanted to draw attention to the relative proportion falling into each class, then we could use a ______bar chart like Figure 2.4 pg. 17
- Pie Charts
- These show how a whole group breaks into several categories
- They slice the circle into pieces whose sizes are ______to the fraction of the whole in each category as in Figure 2.5 pg. 18
- Contingency Tables pages 18 - 20
- These tables shows how the individuals are distributed along each variable contingent upon the value of the other variable
- Examples pages 18 – 19: Class and Survival
Class
First / Second / Third / Crew / Total
Alive / 203 / 118 / 178 / 212
Survival / Dead / 122 / 167 / 528 / 673
Total
- Each cellgives the count for a ______of values of the two variables
- The margins, both on the right and at the bottom, give ______
- Complete the marginal distribution for class (bottom line)
- and the marginal distribution for survival (right column)
- To compare these numbers, let’snow calculate the table percentages
Class
First / Second / Third / Crew / Total
Alive
Survival / Dead
Total / 100%
- Conditional Distributions: these show the distribution of one variable for just those cases that satisfy a condition on another variable
- The conditional distribution of ticket class conditioned upon survival in Table 2.7 on page 20
- The conditional distribution of survival for each category of ticket class in Table 2.8 on page 21
- Make some observations from these tables: ______
______
- Study the bar charts on pg. 22.
- Do you think the risk was about the same across all ticket classes? Justify your response!
- If the risk was about the same across all ticket classes, we would say that survival is independent of class. Are the variables class and survival independent? Why or why not?
- We will frequently explore the concept of independence and will eventually learn ways to check for independence formally.
- Classwork: Complete “Just Checking” on page 24
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VII. Homework #’s 5 – 15 pages 34 – 36