SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
AP Statistics Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
statistics
,
ap
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
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. Useful family of models for unimodal - symmetric distributions
stratified random sample
convenience sample
normal model
least squares
2. The experimental units assigned to a baseline treatment level - typically either the default treatment - which is well understood - or a null - placebo treatment
sample
control group
level
predicted value
3. A numerical measure of the direction and strength of a linear association
standardized value
interquartile range
correlation
placebo
4. The ith ___ is the number that falls above i% of the data
outlier
z-score
5-number summary
percentile
5. A normal model with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1
spread
normal percentile
completely randomized design
standard normal model
6. An individual about whom or which we have data
stem-and-leaf display
case
slope
spread
7. Any individual associated with an experiment who is not aware of how subjects have been allocated to treatment groups
sample size
distribution
blinding
extrapolation
8. Bias introduced to a sample when a large fraction of those sampled fails to respond
model
sample survey
nonresponse bias
unimodal
9. Shows how a 'whole' divides into categories by showing a wedge of a circle whose area corresponds to the proportion in each category
block
trial
standard deviation
pie chart
10. Distributions with more than two modes
ladder of powers
center
frequency table
multimodal
11. The parts of a distribution that typically trail off on either side; they can be characterized as long or short
sample survey
tails
skewed
spread
12. The number of individuals in a sample
sample size
r2
standard normal model
interquartile range
13. The specific values that the experimenter chooses for a factor
level
slope
r2
leverage
14. Control - randomize - replicate - block
symmetric
context
quartile
principles of experimental design
15. Displays the 5-number summary as a central box with whiskers that extend to the non-outlying data values
boxplot
voluntary response bias
stratified random sample
observational study
16. To be valid - an experiment must assign experimental units to treatment groups at random
symmetric
influential point
sample survey
random assignment
17. A positive ____ or association means that - in general - as one variable increases - so does the other; when increases in one variable generally correspond to decreases in the other - the association is negative
random assignment
confounded
standardizing
direction
18. An arrangement of data in which each row represents a case and each column represents a variable
matching
least squares
data table
context
19. Lists the categories in a categorical variable and gives the count or percentage of observations for each category
strength
quantitative variable
quartile
frequency table
20. Bias introduced to a sample when individuals can choose on their own whether to participate in the sample
regression to the mean
voluntary response bias
uniform
retrospective study
21. A sampling scheme that biases the sample in a way that gives a part of the population less representation than it has in the population
undercoverage
stratified random sample
68-95-99.7 rule
skewed
22. Having one mode; this is a useful term for describing the shape of a histogram when it's generally mound-shaped
unimodal
scatterplots
timeplot
factor
23. These are hard to generate - but several websites offer an unlimited supply of equally likely random values
random numbers
shape
direction
re-express data
24. The difference between the first and third quartiles
center
outlier
interquartile range
observational study
25. To describe this aspect of a distribution - look for single vs. multiple modes - and symmetry vs. skewness
standardizing
form
undercoverage
shape
26. Shows quantitative data values in a way that sketches the distribution of the data
bar chart
stem-and-leaf display
experiment
voluntary response bias
27. When either those who could influence or evaluate the results is blinded
single-blind
cluster sample
systematic sample
multistage sample
28. A study that asks questions of a sample drawn from some population in the hope of learning something about the entire population
placebo
sample survey
residuals
boxplot
29. A variable that is not explicitly part of a model but affects the way the variables in the model appear to be related
simulation
strength
percentile
lurking variable
30. The square of the correlation between y and x; gives the fraction of the variability of y accounted for by the least squares linear regression on x; an overall measure of how successful the regression is in linearly relating y to x
convenience sample
68-95-99.7 rule
r2
outlier
31. We do this by taking the logarithm - the square root - the reciprocal - or some other mathematical operation on all values in the data set
blinding
re-express data
conditional distribution
placebo effect
32. Displays data that change over time
timeplot
confounded
model
mode
33. Gives a value in 'y-units per x-unit'; changes of one unit in x are associated with changes of b1 units in predicted values of y
response bias
slope
area principle
trial
34. A sample drawn by selecting individuals systematically from a sampling frame
outlier
principles of experimental design
systematic sample
single-blind
35. The natural tendency of randomly drawn samples to differ
sampling variability
response bias
lurking variable
rescaling
36. Extreme values that don't appear to belong with the rest of the data
slope
census
sample
outliers
37. The process - intervention - or other controlled circumstance applied to randomly assigned experimental units
treatment
uniform
frequency table
blinding
38. When doing this - consider their shape - center - and spread
categorical variable
confounded
boxplot
comparing distributions
39. The difference between the lowest and highest values in a data set
r2
timeplot
range
tails
40. The sequence of several components representing events that we are pretending will take place
quartile
outliers
trial
independence
41. When averages are taken across different groups - they can appear to contradict the overall averages
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
42. Any systematic failure of a sampling method to represent its population; common errors are voluntary response - undercoverage - nonresponse ____ - and response ____
regression to the mean
histogram
placebo
bias
43. The tendency of many human subjects (often 20% or more of experiment subjects) to show a response even when administered a placebo
mode
placebo effect
retrospective study
double-blind
44. Graphs a dot for each case against a single axis
lurking variable
dotplot
observational study
independence
45. A variable other than x and y that simultaneously affects both variables - accounting for the correlation between the two
distribution
slope
data
lurking variable
46. The most basic situation in a simulation in which something happens at random
double-blind
lurking variable
simulation component
data table
47. The distribution of a variable restricting the who to consider only a smaller group of individuals
conditional distribution
undercoverage
standard normal model
5-number summary
48. The distribution of either variable alone in a contingency table; the counts or percentages are the totals found in the margins (last row or column) of the table
matched
marginal distribution
population parameter
undercoverage
49. Although linear models provide an easy way to predict values of y for a given value of x - it is unsafe to predict for values of x far from the ones used to find the linear model equation; predictions should not be trusted
normal percentile
stratified random sample
simpson's paradox
extrapolation
50. If data consist of two or more groups that have been thrown together - it is usually best to fit different linear models to each group than to try to fit a single model to all of the data
subset
normal probability plot
scatterplots
standardized value