Clear, accessible, and teachable, Stats: Modeling the World leads with practical data analysis and graphics to engage students and get them thinking statistically from the start. Through updated, relevant examples and data—and the authors’ signature Think, Show, and Tell problem-solving method—students learn what we can find in data, why we find it interesting, and how to report it to others. The new Fourth Edition is even more engaging than previous editions, builds on the innovative features that have made the first three editions so popular, and includes revisions designed to make it even easier for students to put the concepts of statistics together in a coherent whole.
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I. EXPLORING AND UNDERSTANDING DATA 1. Stats Start Here 2. Data 3. Displaying and Describing Categorical Data 4. Displaying and Comparing Qualitative Data 5. Understanding and Comparing Distributions 6. The Standard Deviation as a Ruler and the Normal Model   II EXPLORING RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN VARIABLES 7. Scatterplots, Association, and Correlation 8. Linear Regression 9. Regression Wisdom 10. Re-expressing Data: Get it Straight!   III. GATHERING DATA 11. Understanding Randomness 12. Sample Surveys 13. Experiments and Observational Studies   IV. RANDOMNESS AND PROBABILITY 14. From Randomness to Probability 15. Probability Rules! 16. Random Variables 17. Probability Models   V. FROM THE DATA AT HAND TO THE WORLD AT LARGE 18. Sampling Distribution Models 19. Confidence Intervals for Proportions 20. Testing Hypotheses About Proportions 21. More About Tests and Intervals 22. Comparing Two Proportions   VI. LEARNING ABOUT THE WORLD 23. Inferences about Means 24. Comparing Means 25. Paired Samples and Blocks   VII. INFERENCE WHEN VARIABLES ARE RELATED 26. Comparing Counts 27. Inferences for Regression 28. Analysis of Variance (on DVD) 29. Multiple Regression (on DVD)
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Access details Includes print text and access card eText included Free shipping Register with a Course ID, a link from your instructor or an LMS link (Blackboard™, Canvas™, Moodle or D2L®) Features Interactive digital learning experience Help when and where you need it Instant feedback on assignments Apps and study tools
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A streamlined book design now clarifies the purpose of each text element, making it easier for students to follow the major theme of each chapter without distraction. The format discourages skimming, and encourages students to read and enjoy the experience. What If features close most chapters by looking at a simulation that explores or extends an important concept. Updated examples, exercises, and data. Included are hundreds of new exercises and continuing exercises updated with the most recent data, which is also included on the DVD and the book’s web site when possible. New stories, research, articles, and other real-world sources are included in the Step-by-Step examples, For Examples, and exercises to engage students and let them explore further. Updated easy-to-read TI Tips now show students how to use the TI-84 Plus statistics functions with the StatWizard operating system. What Have We Learned? These chapter-ending study guides are revised to better help students review the key concepts, terms, and skills. Practice Exams at the end of the book’s seven parts include multiple-choice and free-response questions. These cumulative exams encourage students to keep important concepts and skills in mind throughout the course, while helping them synthesize their understanding as they build connections among the various topics.  
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780133864984
Publisert
2014-02-14
Utgave
4. utgave
Utgiver
Pearson Education (US)
Vekt
2041 gr
Høyde
282 mm
Bredde
224 mm
Dybde
33 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Kombinasjonsprodukt
Antall sider
864

Biografisk notat

David E. Bock taught mathematics at Ithaca High School for 35 years. He has taughtStatistics at Ithaca High School, Tompkins-Cortland Community College, Ithaca College, and Cornell University. Dave has won numerous teaching awards, including the MAA’s Edyth May Sliffe Award for Distinguished High School Mathematics Teaching (twice), Cornell University’s Outstanding Educator Award (three times), and has been a finalist for New York State Teacher of the Year.   Dave holds degrees from the University at Albany in Mathematics (B.A.) and Statistics/Education (M.S.). Dave has been a reader and table leader for the AP Statistics exam, serves as a Statistics consultant to the College Board, and leads workshops and institutes for AP Statistics teachers. He also served as K–12 Education and Outreach Coordinator and a senior lecturer for the Mathematics Department at Cornell University. His understanding of how students learn informs much of this book’s approach. Dave and his wife relax by biking or hiking, and when not at home near Ithaca can often be found in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains. They have a son, a daughter, and four grandchildren.     Richard D. De Veaux is an internationally known educator and consultant. He hastaught at the Wharton School and the Princeton University School of Engineering, where he won a “Lifetime Award for Dedication and Excellence in Teaching.” Since 1994, he has taught Statistics at Williams College. He is currently the C. Carlisle and Margaret Tippit Professor of Statistics at Williams College. Dick has won both the Wilcoxon and Shewell awards from the American Society for Quality. He is an elected member of the International Statistics Institute (ISI) and a fellow of the American Statistical Association (ASA). In 2008, he was named Statistician of the Year by the Boston Chapter of the ASA. Dick is also well known in industry, where for more than 25 years he has consulted for such Fortune 500 companies as American Express, Hewlett-Packard, Alcoa, DuPont, Pillsbury, General Electric, and Chemical Bank. Because he consulted with Mickey Hart on his book Planet Drum, he has also sometimes been called the “OfficialStatistician for the Grateful Dead.” His real-world experiences and anecdotes illustrate many of this book’s chapters.   Dick holds degrees from Princeton University in Civil Engineering (B.S.E.) and Mathematics (A.B.) and from Stanford University in Dance Education (M.A.) and Statistics (Ph.D.), where he studied dance with Inga Weiss and Statistics with Persi Diaconis. His research focuses on the analysis of large data sets and data mining in science and industry.   In his spare time, he is an avid cyclist and swimmer. He also is the founder and bass for the doo-wop group, the Diminished Faculty, and is a frequent singer and soloist with various local choirs, including the Choeur Vittoria of Paris, France. Dick is the father of four children.       Paul F. Velleman has an international reputation for innovative Statistics education.He is the author and designer of the multimedia Statistics program ActivStats, for which he was awarded the EDUCOM Medal for innovative uses of computers in teaching statistics, and the ICTCM Award for Innovation in Using Technology in College Mathematics. He also developed the award-winning statistics program, Data Desk, and the Internet site Dataand Story Library (DASL; lib.stat.cmu.edu/DASL/), which provides data sets for teaching Statistics. Paul’s understanding of using and teaching with technology informs much of this book’s approach.   Paul teaches Statistics at Cornell University in the Department of Statistical Sciences, for which he has been awarded the MacIntyre prize for Exemplary Teaching. He holds an A.B. from Dartmouth College in Mathematics and Social Science, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Statistics from Princeton University, where he studied with John Tukey. His research often deals with statistical graphics and data analysis methods. Paul co-authored (with David Hoaglin) ABCs of Exploratory Data Analysis. Paul is a Fellow ofthe American StatisticalAssociation and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Paul is the father of two boys.