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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP General Mathematics: Probability And Statistics
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clep
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Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Occurs when a subject receives no treatment - but (incorrectly) believes he or she is in fact receiving treatment and responds favorably.
Alpha value (Level of Significance)
Simulation
Placebo effect
A data point
2. Probability of accepting a false null hypothesis.
Probability density
Beta value
Kurtosis
A sample
3. Working from a null hypothesis two basic forms of error are recognized:
Type I errors & Type II errors
The arithmetic mean of a set of numbers x1 - x2 - ... - xn
Sample space
inferential statistics
4. Are two related but separate academic disciplines. Statistical analysis often uses probability distributions - and the two topics are often studied together. However - probability theory contains much that is of mostly of mathematical interest and no
Coefficient of determination
Probability and statistics
Credence
s-algebras
5. (pdfs) and probability mass functions are denoted by lower case letters - e.g. f(x).
Divide the sum by the number of values.
Probability density functions
Block
The arithmetic mean of a set of numbers x1 - x2 - ... - xn
6. (or expectation) of a random variable is the sum of the probability of each possible outcome of the experiment multiplied by its payoff ('value'). Thus - it represents the average amount one 'expects' to win per bet if bets with identical odds are re
A probability space
The Expected value
The Mean of a random variable
The median value
7. Is a process of selecting observations to obtain knowledge about a population. There are many methods to choose on which sample to do the observations.
Sampling
Parameter
Joint probability
Type 2 Error
8. Is a parameter that indexes a family of probability distributions.
Step 1 of a statistical experiment
The sample space
A Statistical parameter
Statistic
9. Is used in 'mathematical statistics' (alternatively - 'statistical theory') to study the sampling distributions of sample statistics and - more generally - the properties of statistical procedures. The use of any statistical method is valid when the
Particular realizations of a random variable
Probability
Conditional distribution
Statistic
10. To find the median value of a set of numbers: Arrange the numbers in numerical order. Locate the two middle numbers in the list. Find the average of those two middle values.
A likelihood function
That value is the median value
the population mean
A Distribution function
11. Statistics involve methods of using information from a sample to draw conclusions regarding the population.
The sample space
Prior probability
Descriptive
Inferential
12. Any specific experimental condition applied to the subjects
the population mean
Experimental and observational studies
A Statistical parameter
Treatment
13. The objects described by a set of data: person (animal) - place - and - thing. (SUBJECTS)
Individual
The Range
Ordinal measurements
A likelihood function
14. A collection of events is mutually independent if for any subset of the collection - the joint probability of all events occurring is equal to the product of the joint probabilities of the individual events. Think of the result of a series of coin-fl
A sample
Kurtosis
Mutual independence
expected value of X
15. (or atomic event) is an event with only one element. For example - when pulling a card out of a deck - 'getting the jack of spades' is an elementary event - while 'getting a king or an ace' is not.
Descriptive
Probability density functions
An Elementary event
Seasonal effect
16. Statistical methods can be used for summarizing or describing a collection of data; this is called
descriptive statistics
quantitative variables
The average - or arithmetic mean
Sampling frame
17. Are written in corresponding lower case letters. For example x1 - x2 - ... - xn could be a sample corresponding to the random variable X.
Ordinal measurements
Particular realizations of a random variable
inferential statistics
A data point
18. Is used to describe probability in a continuous probability distribution. For example - you can't say that the probability of a man being six feet tall is 20% - but you can say he has 20% of chances of being between five and six feet tall. Probabilit
Sampling frame
Pairwise independence
A data point
Probability density
19. Can refer either to a sample not being representative of the population - or to the difference between the expected value of an estimator and the true value.
A probability distribution
Block
That value is the median value
Bias
20. When info. in a contingency table is re-organized into more or less categories - relationships seen can change or reverse.
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21. Gives the probability distribution for a continuous random variable.
categorical variables
A random variable
A probability density function
A data set
22. Describes a characteristic of an individual to be measured or observed.
Residuals
A data point
Step 2 of a statistical experiment
Variable
23. Uses patterns in the sample data to draw inferences about the population represented - accounting for randomness. These inferences may take the form of: answering yes/no questions about the data (hypothesis testing) - estimating numerical characteris
Kurtosis
the sample mean - the sample variance s2 - the sample correlation coefficient r - the sample cumulants kr.
Inferential statistics
A population or statistical population
24. Rejecting a true null hypothesis.
Type 1 Error
Sampling Distribution
The Covariance between two random variables X and Y - with expected values E(X) =
inferential statistics
25. ?
the population correlation
Mutual independence
Type 2 Error
Random variables
26. (e.g. ? - b) are commonly used to denote unknown parameters (population parameters).
Binomial experiment
the population variance
Greek letters
Treatment
27. In number theory - scatter plots of data generated by a distribution function may be transformed with familiar tools used in statistics to reveal underlying patterns - which may then lead to
Likert scale
hypotheses
Block
A Probability measure
28. Is the most commonly used measure of statistical dispersion. It is the square root of the variance - and is generally written s (sigma).
The standard deviation
Likert scale
Ordinal measurements
Correlation
29. (also called statistical variability) is a measure of how diverse some data is. It can be expressed by the variance or the standard deviation.
Mutual independence
A population or statistical population
hypothesis
Statistical dispersion
30. Patterns in the data may be modeled in a way that accounts for randomness and uncertainty in the observations - and are then used for drawing inferences about the process or population being studied; this is called
Null hypothesis
Coefficient of determination
Atomic event
inferential statistics
31. The probability of correctly detecting a false null hypothesis.
Inferential
Marginal distribution
Power of a test
Lurking variable
32. Samples are drawn from two different populations such that there is a matching of the first sample data drawn and a corresponding data value in the second sample data.
Conditional probability
Joint probability
Dependent Selection
Beta value
33. Are usually written in upper case roman letters: X - Y - etc.
Law of Parsimony
A likelihood function
A probability distribution
Random variables
34. Performing the experiment following the experimental protocol and analyzing the data following the experimental protocol. 4. Further examining the data set in secondary analyses - to suggest new hypotheses for future study. 5. Documenting and present
Variability
Likert scale
Step 3 of a statistical experiment
Sampling frame
35. When there is an even number of values...
That is the median value
An experimental study
A sampling distribution
Bias
36. The collection of all possible outcomes in an experiment.
Type 2 Error
Independence or Statistical independence
Sample space
An experimental study
37. Given two random variables X and Y - the joint distribution of X and Y is the probability distribution of X and Y together.
Joint distribution
expected value of X
Descriptive statistics
Statistic
38. Planning the research - including finding the number of replicates of the study - using the following information: preliminary estimates regarding the size of treatment effects - alternative hypotheses - and the estimated experimental variability. Co
Step 1 of a statistical experiment
Observational study
hypothesis
inferential statistics
39. When you have two or more competing models - choose the simpler of the two models.
categorical variables
Law of Parsimony
the population cumulants
Dependent Selection
40. Statistics involve methods of organizing - picturing - and summarizing information from samples or population.
Parameter
Step 3 of a statistical experiment
Descriptive
Kurtosis
41. E[X] :
Statistic
expected value of X
Mutual independence
Variability
42. Is its expected value. The mean (or sample mean of a data set is just the average value.
Conditional distribution
Credence
The Mean of a random variable
The arithmetic mean of a set of numbers x1 - x2 - ... - xn
43. Is inference about a population from a random sample drawn from it or - more generally - about a random process from its observed behavior during a finite period of time.
Descriptive statistics
Step 1 of a statistical experiment
covariance of X and Y
Statistical inference
44. Data are gathered and correlations between predictors and response are investigated.
Probability and statistics
observational study
Type I errors & Type II errors
Confounded variables
45. (or just likelihood) is a conditional probability function considered a function of its second argument with its first argument held fixed. For example - imagine pulling a numbered ball with the number k from a bag of n balls - numbered 1 to n. Then
Lurking variable
Reliable measure
A likelihood function
Type I errors & Type II errors
46. Some commonly used symbols for sample statistics
categorical variables
the sample mean - the sample variance s2 - the sample correlation coefficient r - the sample cumulants kr.
Alpha value (Level of Significance)
methods of least squares
47. Another name for elementary event.
Atomic event
nominal - ordinal - interval - and ratio
hypotheses
A Statistical parameter
48. Is a measure of the 'peakedness' of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable. Higher kurtosis means more of the variance is due to infrequent extreme deviations - as opposed to frequent modestly sized deviations.
categorical variables
Kurtosis
Inferential
Posterior probability
49. Of a group of numbers is the center point of all those number values.
An estimate of a parameter
The average - or arithmetic mean
the population cumulants
Beta value
50. Is a function that gives the probability of all elements in a given space: see List of probability distributions
A population or statistical population
A probability distribution
Type I errors & Type II errors
Descriptive