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Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

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Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering
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Page 1: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

Comparison of Two Means

Paul NiezguskiPeter Heisler

University of MichiganCollege of Engineering

Page 2: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

Professor X is curious if there is statistical difference between the test grades of his morning and afternoon chemistry classes

Page 3: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

Statistical data for the two classes:

Morning class: Afternoon class:mean: 78.5 mean: 84.2std. dev: 11.3 std. dev: 11.0sample size: 24 sample size: 27

Page 4: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

He hypothesizes that afternoon students will be more alert in class and thus have higher test scores.

The class test means support this, but to what certainty can Professor X make this assertion?

Page 5: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

He finds a wiki article on comparison of means by using the Student’s t test.This method uses the following equations:

x1= mean from data set 1x2= mean from data set 2n1= number of measurements set 1n2= number of measurements set 2

s1 = std. deviation of set 1s2 = std. deviation of set 2

For two sets with similar standard deviations:

Page 6: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

After a careful mental calculation by professor X, he determines the following t value:

t = 1.820741

Page 7: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

He then consults the following t table to determine at what confidence level the means are statistically different:

Page 8: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

The table gives a confidence level of 90 – 95% that the two means are statistically different…thus Professor X’s hypothesis is most likely correct.He is so pleased he decides to go hunting.

Page 9: Comparison of Two Means Paul Niezguski Peter Heisler University of Michigan College of Engineering.

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