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The Normal Curve June 20, 2006 Bryan T. Karazsia, M.A.
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Page 1: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

The Normal Curve

June 20, 2006Bryan T. Karazsia, M.A.

Page 2: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Overview

Hand-in HomeworkWhy are distributions so important (particularly the normal distribution)?What is the normal distribution?Z-scoresUsing z-scoresSetting Probable Limits

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Page 4: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Distributions

What’s so important about distributions?Link with probabilities: between shape of distribution for given behavior and probability of that behavior occurring

Can translate area under curve to a probabilityDoing so helps us to describe behavior better…

Ex. – What’s the probability of _____?

Page 5: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

•We can find area under curve for any portion of the distribution and convert it to probability

Page 6: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Distributions

What’s so important about distributions?Areas under a curve are additive.

So, we can explore grouping/addition of 2+ areasCan combine areas into one, single larger area

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•We can combine any areas under the curve with addition

•Above, we can combine the area designated by the color BLUE

•Adds together to be 68.2%

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Normal DistributionCharacteristics of a normal distribution?• Symmetric• Uni-modal• Limits of infinity• Mathematically exact: Can find percentage between any 2 points on a curve (it’s actually already been done for us: Table E.10)

Page 9: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distribution

Characteristics of a normal distribution?

50-34-14 Rule

Page 10: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distribution

Why so important?We usually assume that our DVs are normally distributed

Most phenomena are normally distributed (or close to it) in large populationsAssumption of Normality is required for most statistical tests

Relatively easy to work withCan calculate probabilities easily (in Tables!)

Note: can be done with non-normal distributions, but that would require extensive mathematics ( Calculus )

Page 11: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distribution

When we can calculate probabilities for any point on the curve, our results will depend on the curve’s mean and SD

Why? because area under curve will change

So, anytime these attributes change, we need to calculate new probabilities…

Page 12: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Standard Normal DistributionTo make life easier, we base everything off of one single normal distribution, with predetermined attributes:

µ = 0σ = 1

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Standard Normal DistributionReal world: very rarely (if ever) have a real-world distribution that matches this standard normal distribution exactlyBUT, we can mathematically manipulate, or transform, our data…

Enter Math---but remember why!Key = Concepts…the math will fall into place

What are we doing again???

Page 14: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Z-scoresHow do we transform data?

Convert our sample distribution such that…Mean = 0SD = 1

Subtract mean of sample from EACH data pt.Divide each data pt. by the SD of the sample

When we do this, we are converting raw scores to standardized scores(a.k.a., z-scores)

Page 15: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Z-scoresHow do we transform data?Formula: z-score for any particular observation (score, x)

x = indiv. scoreµ = population meanσ = population SDz = standardized scoreσ

µ)( −=

xz

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Z-scores

79.120.3

==

x

x

σµ

67.79.1

)2.1(79.1

)20.32(

)(

1

1

1

1

−=

−=

−=

−=

z

z

z

xzσµ

Part X Y (X – µ) z1 2 1 -1.2 -0.672 1 4 -2.2 -1.233 3 8 -0.2 -0.114 5 9 1.8 1.015 5 7 1.8 1.01Σ 16 29

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Z-scores

World Cup Data (hypothetical)

ORIGINAL DATA Z-SCORES

Page 18: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Z-scoresWhy are the distributions the same???

Z-score transformation is a Linear TransformationAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constantRelationship among values does NOT change (shape of distribution remains unaffected)

Common examples: Distance from KSU to Panama City, FL:

985 miles or 62,409,600 inches

Page 19: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Z-scoresCommon Misconception:

Converting raw scores to z-scores will normalizethe data (will give us a normal curve)

FALSE

Shape of distribution will remain unaffected b/c relationships among variables does not change

Page 20: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Quick Review

What have we accomplished by converting raw-scores to z-scores???What good is it? (GRE example)

If you still don’t think they are very helpful, just hang-on…

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Link to probabilities: (Example)

Suppose we want to know the probability that any random person will score 1 standard deviation above the mean (score 600) on the GRE VerbalStated differently, what is the area under the normal curve that is 1 SD above the mean?

Notes:Standard normal curve: total area = 1.0 (100% of observation)We are assuming GRE scores are normally distributed

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Link to probabilities: (Example)

We already know that z-scores represent SDs from the mean, so we will want to find area above z = 1.

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Link to probabilities: (Example)

Here is where we utilize Table E.10Note: only positive half of normal distribution in Table

(z > 0)

We want z = 1

Page 24: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)

Table E.10 (Normal Distribution; z)We see…

“mean to z” = .3413“Larger portion” = .8413“Smaller Portion” = .1587

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Table E.10 (Normal Distribution; z)“mean to z” = .3413

Page 26: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Table E.10 (Normal Distribution; z)“Larger portion” = .8413

Page 27: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Table E.10 (Normal Distribution; z)“Smaller portion” = .1587

Page 28: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)What if we wanted to know if the random person will score > 1 SD in either direction?

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Can now also calculate area (probability) between z = -1 & z = +1

Page 30: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Let’s go one step further…

What is probability a person will fall between 1.5 (650) & 2.5 (750) SDs from the mean on the GRE Verbal

When doing such calculations, it is Usuallywise to draw the diagram (will eliminate many errors)

Page 31: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Let’s go one step further…

What is probability a person will fall between 1.5 (650) & 2.5 (750) SDs from the mean on the GRE Verbal

Page 32: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Let’s go one step further…

What is probability a person will fall between 1.5 (650) & 2.5 (750) SDs from the mean on the GRE VerbalFrom Table E.10…

Z = 1.5 “mean to z” = .4332

Z = 2.5 “mean to z” = .4938

We want the difference between these….4938 - .4332 = .0606 (.06)

Probability of falling between z = 1.5 & z = 2.5 is .06

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Setting Probable Limits on Observations:

“If I draw an adult at random, 95% of the time his/her score will lie between ____ & ____”

To answer this question, we need to find corresponding z-scores…

Remember: Table is only ½ of the distribution…

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Setting Probable Limits on Observations:

So, 95% of time, any random individual’s score will fall between –1.96 & + 1.96 SDs from the mean

????????????????????????????????

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Normal Distributions (cont.)Setting Probable Limits on Observations:

If we want to hear some music, we need to convert these z-scores back to raw scores…

304&696196500)100*96.1(500

)*(

=±=±=

±=

xx

zx σµ

Page 36: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Normal Distributions (cont.)Is anything we did today useful???

We see them all the time…IQ, GREs, SATs, etc…

They all use standard scores…and perform another linear transformation to derive the scores we hear so often (IQ = 102, SAT = 1600, GRE Verbal = 520)All easy too…just convert raw scores to z-scores, then you can convert to whatever system you like…

Page 37: The Normal Curvepersonal.kent.edu/~bkarazsi/Quant 1 Normal Distribution.pdfAdd, subtract, multiply, and/or divide by a constant Relationship among values does NOT change (shape of

Review

What is Variability?Measure of Variability

RangeVarianceStandard Deviation

Definitional vs. Computational formulaePractice before next class!!!


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