Business Statistics: A First Course / Edition 3

Business Statistics: A First Course / Edition 3

ISBN-10:
0134182448
ISBN-13:
9780134182445
Pub. Date:
01/15/2016
Publisher:
Pearson Education
ISBN-10:
0134182448
ISBN-13:
9780134182445
Pub. Date:
01/15/2016
Publisher:
Pearson Education
Business Statistics: A First Course / Edition 3

Business Statistics: A First Course / Edition 3

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Overview

For one-semester courses in business statistics. This text offers a streamlined presentation of Business Statistics, Third Edition, by Sharpe, De Veaux, and Velleman.

Better Decisions. Better Results.

Business Statistics: A First Course, Third Edition, by Sharpe, De Veaux, and Velleman, narrows the gap between theory and practice—relevant statistical methods empower business students to make effective, data-informed decisions. With their unique blend of teaching, consulting, and entrepreneurial experiences, this dynamic author team brings a modern edge to teaching statistics to business students. Focusing on statistics in the context of real business issues–with an emphasis on analysis and understanding over computation–the text helps students think analytically, prepares them to make better business decisions, and shows them how to effectively communicate results.

Note: You are purchasing a standalone product; MyMathLab does not come packaged with this content. Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MyMathLab, ask your instructor for the correct package ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.

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Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780134182445
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 01/15/2016
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 640
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

As a researcher of statistical problems in business and a professor of Statistics at a business school, Norean Radke Sharpe (Ph.D. University of Virginia) understands the challenges and specific needs of the business student. She is currently teaching at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University, where she is also Senior Associate Dean and Director of Undergraduate Programs. Prior to joining Georgetown, she taught business statistics and operations research courses to both undergraduate and MBA students for fourteen years at Babson College. Before moving into business education, she taught statistics for several years at Bowdoin College and conducted research at Yale University. Norean is coauthor of the recent text, A Casebook for Business Statistics: Laboratories for Decision Making, and she has authored more than 30 articles–primarily in the areas of statistics education and women in science. Norean currently serves as Associate Editor for the journal Cases in Business, Industry, and Government Statistics. Her research focuses on business forecasting and statistics education. She is also co-founder of DOME Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit foundation that works to increase Diversity and Outreach in Mathematics and Engineering for the greater Boston area. She has been active in increasing the participation of women and underrepresented students in science and mathematics for several years and has two children of her own.

Richard D. De Veaux (Ph.D. Stanford University) is an internationally known educator, consultant, and lecturer. Dick has taught statistics at a business school (Wharton), an engineering school (Princeton), and a liberal arts college (Williams). While at Princeton, he won a Lifetime Award for Dedication and Excellence in Teaching. Since 1994, he has taught at Williams College, although he returned to Princeton for the academic year 2006—2007 as the William R. Kenan Jr. Visiting Professor of Distinguished Teaching. He is currently the C. Carlisle and Margaret Tippit Professor of Statistics at Williams College. Dick holds degrees from Princeton University in Civil Engineering and Mathematics and from Stanford University in Dance Education and Statistics, where he studied with Persi Diaconis. His research focuses on the analysis of large data setsand data mining in science and industry. 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). He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the ASA. Dick is well known in industry, having consulted for such Fortune 500 companies as American Express, Hewlett-Packard, Alcoa, DuPont, Pillsbury, General Electric, and Chemical Bank. He was named the “Statistician of the Year” for 2008 by the Boston Chapter of the American Statistical Association for his contributions to teaching, research, and consulting. 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 (Ph.D. Princeton University) has an international reputation for innovative statistics education. He designed the Data Desk® software package and is also the author and designer of the award-winning ActivStats® multimedia software, for which he received the EDUCOM Medal for innovative uses of computers in teaching statistics and the ICTCM Award for Innovation in Using Technology in College Mathematics. He is the founder and CEO of Data Description, Inc. (www.datadesk.com), which supports both o

Table of Contents

Preface

Index of Applications

Part I: Exploring and Collecting Data

1. Data and Decisions (E-Commerce)

1.1 What Are Data?

1.2 Variable Types

1.3 Data Sources: Where, How, and When

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Data

Brief Case: Credit Card Bank

2. Displaying and Describing Categorical Data (KEEN, Inc.)

2.1 Summarizing a Categorical Variable

2.2 Displaying a Categorical Variable

2.3 Exploring Two Categorical Variables: Contingency Tables

2.4 Segmented Bar Charts and Mosaic Plots

2.5 Simpson’s Paradox

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Displaying Categorical Data

Brief Case: Credit Card Bank

3. Displaying and Describing Quantitative Data (AIG)

3.1 Displaying Quantitative Variables

3.2 Shape

3.3 Center

3.4 Spread of the Distribution

3.5 Shape, Center, and Spread–A Summary

3.6 Standardizing Variables

3.7 Five-Number Summary and Boxplots

3.8 Comparing Groups

3.9 Identifying Outliers

3.10 Time Series Plots

*3.11 Transforming Skewed Data

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Displaying and Summarizing Quantitative Variables

Brief Cases: Detecting the Housing Bubble and Socio-Economic Data on States

4. Correlation and Linear Regression (Amazon.com)

4.1 Looking at Scatterplots

4.2 Assigning Roles to Variables in Scatterplots

4.3 Understanding Correlation

4.4 Lurking Variables and Causation

4.5 The Linear Model

4.6 Correlation and the Line

4.7 Regression to the Mean

4.8 Checking the Model

4.9 Variation in the Model and R2

4.10 Reality Check: Is the Regression Reasonable?

4.11 Nonlinear Relationships

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Correlation and Regression

Brief Cases: Fuel Efficiency, Cost of Living, and Mutual Funds

Case Study I: Paralyzed Veterans of America

Part II: Modeling with Probability

5. Randomness and Probability (Credit Reports and the Fair Isaacs Corporation)

5.1 Random Phenomena and Probability

5.2 The Nonexistent Law of Averages

5.3 Different Types of Probability

5.4 Probability Rules

5.5 Joint Probability and Contingency Tables

5.6 Conditional Probability

5.7 Constructing Contingency Tables

5.8 Probability Trees

*5.9 Reversing the Conditioning: Bayes’ Rule

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Generating Random Numbers

Brief Case: Global Markets

6. Random Variables and Probability Models (Metropolitan Life Insurance Company)

6.1 Expected Value of a Random Variable

6.2 Standard Deviation of a Random Variable

6.3 Properties of Expected Values and Variances

6.4 Bernoulli Trials

6.5 Discrete Probability Models

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Random Variables and Probability Models

Brief Case: Investment Options

7. The Normal and Other Continuous Distributions (The NYSE)

7.1 The Standard Deviation as a Ruler

7.2 The Normal Distribution

7.3 Normal Probability Plots

7.4 The Distribution of Sums of Normals

7.5 The Normal Approximation for the Binomial

7.6 Other Continuous Random Variables

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Probability Calculations and Plots

Brief Case: Price/Earnings and Stock Value

8. Surveys and Sampling (Roper Polls)

8.1 Three Ideas of Sampling

8.2 Populations and Parameters

8.3 Common Sampling Designs

8.4 The Valid Survey

8.5 How to Sample Badly

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Random Sampling

Brief Cases: Market Survey Research and The GfK Roper Reports Worldwide Survey

9. Sampling Distributions and Confidence Intervals for Proportions (Marketing Credit Cards: The MBNA Story)

9.1 The Distribution of Sample Proportions

9.2 The Sampling Distribution for Proportions

9.3 A Confidence Interval for a Proportion

9.4 Margin of Error: Certainty vs. Precision

9.5 Choosing the Sample Size

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Confidence Intervals for Proportions

Brief Cases: Has Gold Lost Its Luster? and Forecasting Demand

Case Study II: Real Estate Simulation

Part III: Inference for Decision Making

10. Testing Hypotheses about Proportions (Dow Jones Industrial Average)

10.1 Hypotheses

10.2 A Trial as a Hypothesis Test

10.3 P-Values

10.4 The Reasoning of Hypothesis Testing

10.5 Alternative Hypotheses

10.6 Alpha Levels and Significance

10.7 Critical Values

10.8 Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Tests

10.9 Two Types of Errors

10.10 Power

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Hypothesis Tests

Brief Cases: Metal Production, Loyalty Program, and Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Tests

11. Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Tests for Means (Guinness & Co.)

11.1 The Central Limit Theorem

11.2 The Sampling Distribution of the Mean

11.3 How Sampling Distribution Models Work

11.4 Gosset and the t-Distribution

11.5 A Confidence Interval for Means

11.6 Assumptions and Conditions

11.7 Testing Hypotheses about Means–the One-Sample t-Test

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Inference for Means

Brief Cases: Real Estate and Donor Profiles

12. Comparing Two Means (Visa Global Organization)

12.1 Comparing Two Means

12.2 The Two-Sample t-Test

12.3 Assumptions and Conditions

12.4 A Confidence Interval for the Difference Between Two Means

12.5 The Pooled t-Test

12.6 Paired Data

12.7 Paired t-Methods

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Comparing Two Groups

Brief Cases: Real Estate and Consumer Spending Patterns (Data Analysis)

13. Inference for Counts: Chi-Square Tests (SAC Capital)

13.1 Goodness-of-Fit Tests

13.2 Interpreting Chi-Square Values

13.3 Examining the Residuals

13.4 The Chi-Square Test of Homogeneity

13.5 Comparing Two Proportions

13.6 Chi-Square Test of Independence

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Chi-Square

Brief Cases: Health Insurance and Loyalty Program

Case Study III: Investment Strategy Segmentation

Part IV Models for Decision Making

14. Inference for Regression (Nambé Mills)

14.1 A Hypothesis Test and Confidence Interval for the Slope

14.2 Assumptions and Conditions

14.3 Standard Errors for Predicted Values

14.4 Using Confidence and Prediction Intervals

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Regression Analysis

Brief Cases: Frozen Pizza and Global Warming?

15. Multiple Regression (Zillow.com)

15.1 The Multiple Regression Model

15.2 Interpreting Multiple Regression Coefficients

15.3 Assumptions and Conditions for the Multiple Regression Model

15.4 Testing the Multiple Regression Model

15.5 Adjusted R2 and the F-statistic

*15.6 The Logistic Regression Model

Ethics in Action

Technology Help: Regression Analysis

Brief Case: Golf Success

Part V: Selected Topics in Decision Making

16. Introduction to Data Mining (Paralyzed Veterans of America)

16.1 The Big Data Revolution

16.2 Direct Marketing

16.3 The Goals of Data Mining

16.4 Data Mining Myths

16.5 Successful Data Mining

16.6 Data Mining Problems

16.7 Data Mining Algorithms

16.8 The Data Mining Process

16.9 Summary

Ethics in Action

Case Study V: Marketing Experiment

Appendices

A. Answers

B. Tables and Selected Formulas

C. Photo Acknowledgments

Index

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