Getting started: mean height of a population, Height (in centimeters) of each of 10 women, Chapter 13 – Texas Instruments TI-84 User Manual

Page 333

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Chapter 13: Inferential Statistics and Distributions

330

Chapter 13:

Chapter 13:

Chapter 13:

Chapter 13:

Inferential Statistics and Distributions

Inferential Statistics and Distributions

Inferential Statistics and Distributions

Inferential Statistics and Distributions

Getting Started: Mean Height of a Population

Getting Started: Mean Height of a Population

Getting Started: Mean Height of a Population

Getting Started: Mean Height of a Population

Getting Started is a fast-paced introduction. Read the chapter for details.

Suppose you want to estimate the mean height of a population of women given the
random sample below. Because heights among a biological population tend to be
normally distributed, a t distribution confidence interval can be used when estimating the
mean. The 10 height values below are the first 10 of 90 values, randomly generated from
a normally distributed population with an assumed mean of 165.1 centimeters and a
standard deviation of 6.35 centimeters (

randNorm(165.1,6.35,90)

with a seed of 789).

Height (in centimeters) of Each of 10 Women

Height (in centimeters) of Each of 10 Women

Height (in centimeters) of Each of 10 Women

Height (in centimeters) of Each of 10 Women

169.43 168.33 159.55 169.97 159.79 181.42 171.17 162.04 167.15 159.53

1.

Press

… Í to display the stat list editor.

Press

} to move the cursor onto

L1

, and then

press

y 6. The

Name=

prompt is displayed on

the bottom line. The

Ø cursor indicates that alpha-

lock is on. The existing list name columns shift to
the right.

Note:

Your stat editor may not look like the one

pictured here, depending on the lists you have
already stored.

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