AP Statistics 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
explained   by  regression  on  the explanatory variable

Complement of an event —set of all outcomes in the sample space that are not in the event


Completely randomized design —when all subjects (or experimental units) are randomly assigned to
treatments in an experiment


Conditional probability —the probability of one event succeeding given that some other event has
already occurred


Confidence interval —an interval that, with a given level of confidence, is likely to contain a population
value; (estimate) ± (margin of error)


Confidence level —the probability that the procedure used to construct an interval will generate an
interval that does contain the population value


Confounding variable —has an effect on the outcomes of the study but whose effects cannot be separated
from those of the treatment variable


Contingency table —see two-way table


Continuous data —data that can be measured, or take on values in an interval; the set of possible values
cannot be counted


Continuous random variable —a random variable whose values are continuous data; takes all values in
an interval


Control —see statistical control


Convenience sample —sample chosen without any random mechanism; chooses individuals based on
ease of selection


Correlation coefficient (r ) —measures the strength of the linear relationship between two quantitative
variables;


Correlation is not causation —just because two variables correlate strongly does not mean that one
caused the other


Critical value —values in a distribution that identify certain specified areas of the distribution


Degrees of freedom —number of independent data-points in a distribution


Density function —a function that is everywhere non-negative and has a total area equal to 1 underneath
it and above the horizontal axis


Descriptive statistics —process of examining data analytically and graphically


Dimension —size of a two-way table; r × c


Discrete data —data that can be counted (possibly infinite) or placed in order


Discrete random variable —random variable whose values are discrete data


Dotplot —graph in which data values are identified as dots placed above their corresponding values on a
number line


Double blind —experimental design in which neither the subjects nor the study administrators know what
treatment a subject has received


Empirical Rule (68-95-99.7 Rule) —states that, in a normal distribution, about 68% of the terms are

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