MATH 11400 	Statistics 1	2008-09
1. Exploratory Data Analysis & Computing in R

Aims | Objectives | Reading | Handouts & Problem Sheets | Questions | Links

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Aims

This section introduces a selection of simple graphical and numerical methods for exploring and summarizing single data sets. These methods generally form part of an approach called Exploratory Data Analysis. Such analysis and evaluation can be informative in its own right, but also forms an essential first step before any detailed statistical analysis is performed on the data.

The section also introduces the statistical package R through its use for simple graphical and numerical computation of plots and summary statistics.


Objectives

The following objectives will help you to assess how well you have mastered the relevant material. By the end of this section you should be able to:


Suggested Reading

RiceChapter 10Sections 10.1-10.6

Handouts and Problem Sheets

Copies of Handouts, Problem Sheets and Solution Sheets for the unit will be made available each week on the Statistics 1 course pages on
Blackboard.


Questions - set this week

PROBLEM SHEET 1 -- Question 1


Interesting links

Rice Virtual Lab in Statistics
This is a very nice collection of applets, simulations, demonstrations and information on many aspects of statistics, and I site I will encourage you to visit at several points in the course. Particularly worth visiting for material relating to this week's lectures is the page on histograms.

MathWorld
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics is a comprehensive and interactive mathematics encyclopedia, made up of an interlinked framework of mathematical exposition and illustrative examples, which claims to be the web's most complete mathematics resource. There are sections on the various branches of mathematics, including Probability and Statistics, but it may take you a while to find your way round the site. For material related to this week's material you might perhaps start by looking at Boxplots (which the encyclopaedia calls a Box and Whiskers Plot), and take it from there.

Ask Dr Math
Ask Dr. Math is a question and answer service for math students and their teachers. It operates at various levels - the link above is to a list of college level topics, or you can go directly to the statistics questions. For this week you might find the discussion of quartiles particularly interesting.

A searchable archive is available by level and topic, as well as summaries of Frequently Asked Questions (the Dr. Math FAQ), and there is a history of how the site came about at The History of Dr. Math.

Rossman-Chance
This Rossman-Chance site has one or two nice applets. Particularly interesting for this week is one that illustrates the effect of bin width on the resulting histogram.

Note that I have no control over the content or availability of these external web pages. The links may be slow to load, or may sometimes fail altogether - please email me to report if a link goes down. Similarly applets may be slow to load or run, but beware that you may experience problems if you try to exit them before they have finished loading.


Return to the Statistics1 course information page
Dr E J Collins,
Department of Mathematics,
University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TW, UK
Email: E.J.Collins@bristol.ac.uk
Telephone: +44 (0) 117 928 7977; Fax: +44 (0) 117 928 7999