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3 min read•june 18, 2024
Josh Argo
Jed Quiaoit
Josh Argo
Jed Quiaoit
Sometimes in statistical studies, it is important to compare two different populations to see if they are different. For instance, what if we want to compare the weights of two types of apples: 🍏 vs. 🍎. Perhaps we believe that the weight of 🍎 is more than 🍏 or maybe we just think they are different. Either way, we have the statistical means to be able to check if the weights are different or if one weighs more than the other. One option of comparing these two populations is to create a confidence interval for the difference of two population means.
As with any act of statistical inference, we must check our conditions for inference prior to performing any calculations.
As always, it absolutely essential that your samples come from a randomized process since we seek to infer things about a population. Since we are dealing with two populations, both samples must be random. If you are performing an experiment to check the difference in two populations, you must verify that both samples were randomly assigned to treatments, not just randomly selected. ⭐
Since we are generally sampling without replacement, we must check to be sure that the samples are independent. We can use this by checking the 10% condition for both samples. 🧠
💡 NOTE: If doing an experiment, it is not necessary to check the 10% condition. A randomized experiment is sufficient for independence.
To check normality of a sampling distribution for the difference in two population means, we have to be sure that both samples have approximately normal sampling distributions. This can be done using the Central Limit Theorem (n ≥ 30), verifying that both populations are normally distributed, or a box plot of both samples show no strong skewness or apparent outliers. 🔔
To calculate a confidence interval for the difference in two population means, we must first calculate our point estimate and margin of error.
Our point estimate is what we believe the difference between the two populations is based off of our sample means. To find this, we simply subtract our two sample means. ⛳
Let's say that we have a bag of green apples and a bag of red apples and we want to estimate the difference in population means of the two types of apples. Our sample of 30 🍏s weigh a mean of 5 oz with a standard deviation of 0.2 oz and our sample of 30 🍎s weigh a mean of 4.5 oz with a standard deviation of 0.15 oz. Create and interpret a confidence interval for the difference in the two population means of the weights of green apples and red apples.
The easiest way to construct your interval is to use technology such as a graphing calculator to do so:
🎥 Watch: AP Stats - Inference: Confidence Intervals for Means
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3 min read•june 18, 2024
Josh Argo
Jed Quiaoit
Josh Argo
Jed Quiaoit
Sometimes in statistical studies, it is important to compare two different populations to see if they are different. For instance, what if we want to compare the weights of two types of apples: 🍏 vs. 🍎. Perhaps we believe that the weight of 🍎 is more than 🍏 or maybe we just think they are different. Either way, we have the statistical means to be able to check if the weights are different or if one weighs more than the other. One option of comparing these two populations is to create a confidence interval for the difference of two population means.
As with any act of statistical inference, we must check our conditions for inference prior to performing any calculations.
As always, it absolutely essential that your samples come from a randomized process since we seek to infer things about a population. Since we are dealing with two populations, both samples must be random. If you are performing an experiment to check the difference in two populations, you must verify that both samples were randomly assigned to treatments, not just randomly selected. ⭐
Since we are generally sampling without replacement, we must check to be sure that the samples are independent. We can use this by checking the 10% condition for both samples. 🧠
💡 NOTE: If doing an experiment, it is not necessary to check the 10% condition. A randomized experiment is sufficient for independence.
To check normality of a sampling distribution for the difference in two population means, we have to be sure that both samples have approximately normal sampling distributions. This can be done using the Central Limit Theorem (n ≥ 30), verifying that both populations are normally distributed, or a box plot of both samples show no strong skewness or apparent outliers. 🔔
To calculate a confidence interval for the difference in two population means, we must first calculate our point estimate and margin of error.
Our point estimate is what we believe the difference between the two populations is based off of our sample means. To find this, we simply subtract our two sample means. ⛳
Let's say that we have a bag of green apples and a bag of red apples and we want to estimate the difference in population means of the two types of apples. Our sample of 30 🍏s weigh a mean of 5 oz with a standard deviation of 0.2 oz and our sample of 30 🍎s weigh a mean of 4.5 oz with a standard deviation of 0.15 oz. Create and interpret a confidence interval for the difference in the two population means of the weights of green apples and red apples.
The easiest way to construct your interval is to use technology such as a graphing calculator to do so:
🎥 Watch: AP Stats - Inference: Confidence Intervals for Means
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