Easy Statistics Question. (1 Viewer)

SoCal

Hollywood
Joined
Jul 5, 2003
Messages
3,913
Location
California
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
I have had a think about this for a while and it is obviously pretty easy because the book and lecture slides don't bother to really explain it but I can't seem to see where they get the answer from:eek:. I would ask my lecturer but I won't see him for a week and I really want to know:).

Anyway, the sentence is:

The probability that z falls between -z(α/2) and +z(α/2) is equal to 1 - α. For example, when 1 - α = 0.95, we have z(α/2) = z(0.025) = 1.96.
I understand everything except for why z(0.025) = 1.96:confused:?

Thanks for any help:).

Note: the stuff in brackets are supposed to be subscripts.
 

acmilan

I'll stab ya
Joined
May 24, 2004
Messages
3,989
Location
Jumanji
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
I think, but am not 100% sure, that z is the normal distribution function?

If you look at this table (2nd page):

http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1905/r/formulaNEW.pdf

It shows the normal distribution values. You'll find that 1 - 0.025 = 0.9750

You can find 0.9750, which occurs at z = 1.96 (go down the first column to 1.90 and across to the column with heading 0.06). Thus z(0.025) = 1.96.

This is only my guess, it may not be whats actually needed.
 

SoCal

Hollywood
Joined
Jul 5, 2003
Messages
3,913
Location
California
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
acmilan said:
I think, but am not 100% sure, that z is the normal distribution function?

If you look at this table (2nd page):

http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1905/r/formulaNEW.pdf

It shows the normal distribution values. You'll find that 1 - 0.025 = 0.9750

You can find 0.9750, which occurs at z = 1.96 (go down the first column to 1.90 and across to the column with heading 0.06). Thus z(0.025) = 1.96.

This is only my guess, it may not be whats actually needed.
Yeah, thanks heaps dude this was exactly right. After I read this I went back and I must have missed this:

z(A) is defined as the z value for which the area to the right of z(A) under the standard normal curve is A.
After reading that I understood it straight away. Thanks again:).
 

SoCal

Hollywood
Joined
Jul 5, 2003
Messages
3,913
Location
California
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
At least it is easy. I did all this stuff last year, I am just having trouble trying to remember it:p.
 

ballerinabarbie

bundy for me
Joined
Mar 21, 2003
Messages
719
Location
Somewhere in NSW... who knows?
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
i have to do stat 200 in third year... although apparently its easier than stat 100...

and the joys of R... we have to do our assigments in R - but apparently our end of semester exam (70% of our mark) doesn't have a lot to do with R
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top