Module 8: Confidence Intervals (Chapter 7)
Section outline
-
Suppose you were trying to determine the mean rent of a two-bedroom apartment in your town. You might look in the classified section of the newspaper, write down several rents listed, and average them together. You would have obtained a point estimate of the true mean. If you are trying to determine the percentage of times you make a basket when shooting a basketball, you might count the number of shots you make and divide that by the number of shots you attempted. In this case, you would have obtained a point estimate for the true proportion. We use sample data to make generalizations about an unknown population. This part of statistics is called inferential statistics. The sample data help us to make an estimate of a population parameter. We realize that the point estimate is most likely not the exact value of the population parameter, but close to it. After calculating point estimates, we construct interval estimates, called confidence intervals.
In this chapter, you will learn to construct and interpret confidence intervals. You will also learn a new distribution, the Student's-t, and how it is used with these intervals. Throughout the chapter, it is important to keep in mind that the confidence interval is a random variable. It is the population parameter that is fixed.
If you worked in the marketing department of an entertainment company, you might be interested in the mean number of songs a consumer downloads a month from iTunes. If so, you could conduct a survey and calculate the sample mean,
, and the sample standard deviation, s. You would use
to estimate the population mean and s to estimate the population standard deviation. The sample mean,
, is the point estimate for the population mean, μ. The sample standard deviation, s, is the point estimate for the population standard deviation, σ. Each of
and s is called a statistic.
A confidence interval is another type of estimate but, instead of being just one number, it is an interval of numbers. The interval of numbers is a range of values calculated from a given set of sample data. The confidence interval is likely to include an unknown population parameter. Suppose for the iTunes example, we do not know the population mean μ, but we do know that the population standard deviation is σ = 1 and our sample size is 100. Then, by the central limit theorem, the standard deviation for the sample mean is
. The empirical rule, which applies to bell-shaped distributions, says that in approximately 95% of the samples, the sample mean,
, will be within two standard deviations of the population mean μ. For our iTunes example, two standard deviations is (2)(0.1) = 0.2. The sample mean
is likely to be within 0.2 units of μ. Because
is within 0.2 units of μ, which is unknown, then μ is likely to be within 0.2 units of
in 95% of the samples. The population mean μ is contained in an interval whose lower number is calculated by taking the sample mean and subtracting two standard deviations (2)(0.1) and whose upper number is calculated by taking the sample mean and adding two standard deviations. In other words, μ is between
and
in 95% of all the samples.
For the iTunes example, suppose that a sample produced a sample mean
=
. Then the unknown population mean μ is between
and
. We say that we are 95% confident that the unknown population mean number of songs downloaded from iTunes per month is between 1.8 and 2.2. The 95% confidence interval is (1.8, 2.2). The 95% confidence interval implies two possibilities. Either the interval (1.8, 2.2) contains the true mean μ or our sample produced an
that is not within 0.2 units of the true mean μ. The second possibility happens for only 5% of all the samples (95–100%).
Remember that a confidence interval is created for an unknown population parameter like the population mean, μ. Confidence intervals for some parameters have the form: (point estimate – margin of error, point estimate + margin of error). The margin of error depends on the confidence level or percentage of confidence and the standard error of the mean. When you read newspapers and journals, some reports will use the phrase "margin of error." Other reports will not use that phrase but include a confidence interval as the point estimate plus or minus the margin of error. These are two ways of expressing the same concept.
Image Caption: Have you ever wondered what the average number of M&Ms in a bag at the grocery store is? You can use confidence intervals to answer this question. (credit: comedy_nose/flickr)
(Content & Image Source: Chapter 8 Introduction, Introductory Statistics, Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean, OpenStax, CC BY 4.0 License)
Upon completion of this module, you will be able to:7.1 A Single Population Mean using the Normal Distribution- Calculate the confidence interval
- Calculate the error bound (EBM)
- Determine the confidence level and sample size
7.2 A Single Population Mean using the Student t Distribution- Calculate Student's t-probabilities.
- Calculate the confidence interval
7.3 A Population Proportion- Calculate the error bound for a proportion.
- Calculate the confidence interval of p.
- Calculate the sample size n.
To achieve these objectives:- Read the Module 8 Introduction (see above).
- Read Sections 7.1 - 7.3 of Chapter 7: Confidence Intervals in Introductory Statistics (links to each Section provided below)
- Complete the MyOpenMath Homework Assignments for the topics in the Chapter (links provided below) - These are graded!
- View the Chapter 7 Review (link provided below)
- Practice the problems in the Chapter 7 Practice and Homework, checking the solutions provided (links to each provided below)
- Submit the Chapter 7 Project I: Home Costs, Chapter 7 Project II: Place of Birth, or Chapter 7 Project III: Women's Heights (links to project and submission link provided below)
- Complete the MyOpenMath Quiz for Chapter 7 (link provided below) - This is graded!
- Once you complete the Quiz, upload your work in the Quiz Work Upload Assignment using the submission link below.
- Post in the Chapter 7 Q&A Discussion Forum - link provided below.
Note the check boxes to the right that help you track your progress: some are automatic, and some are manual
Module Pressbooks Resources and Activities
You will find the following resources and activities in this module at the Pressbooks website. Click on the links below to access or complete each item.
Background Colour
Font Face
Font Kerning
Font Size
Image Visibility
Letter Spacing
Line Height
Link Highlight
Text Colour