Quiz Content

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. You flip a two-sided coin – what is the probability of getting heads?

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. You roll a six-sided dice – what is the probability of rolling 1?

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. You roll a six-sided dice once again – what is the probability of rolling either a 3 or a 5?

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. You flip a two-sided coin a couple more times? What is the probability of flipping heads twice in a row?

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. You roll the dice two more times in a row – what are the odds of rolling a 6 twice in a row?

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. What does a dependent event mean?

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. When the probability of an outcome is determined using an empirical test it is known as what?

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. In a recent survey it was determined that 9,737 out of a total of 89,418 young people aged 15 to 24 who did not acquire a higher education were unemployed. What is the probability that a randomly selected youth in this age bracket will be unemployed?

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. When researchers use probability samples, what do they rely on to make any sort of generalizations about a larger population?

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. Inferential statistical techniques require data collected from what?

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. What is sampling error?

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. The results produced by a sample are known as what?

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. The true results in a population are referred to as what?

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. There are several ways to select a probability sample. Which of the following is not one of them?

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. Which of the following steps is not necessary to generating a simple random sample?

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. Which of the following is not a characteristic of cluster sampling?

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. What can't be said about the relationship between a sample and the population it's drawn from?

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. Who is regularly excluded from surveys by Statistics Canada?

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. What does the denominator in the formulas for variance and standard deviation change to if you are calculating these two statistical measures from sample data?

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. What do weights that account for each case's probability of selection do to a dataset?

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. The closer a probability is to 1, the more likely it is that something will occur.

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. The symbol for proportions, p, is not the same as the symbol for probabilities.

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. The probability of a specific outcome occurring is calculated by dividing the number of outcomes of interest by the total number of possible outcomes.

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. In joint probability examples sometimes the probability of a second event changes depending on the outcome of the first event.

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. Researchers use theoretical probabilities to calculate the likelihood of a person in the population being selected to be part of a sample.

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. The fewer empirical trials undertaken, the closer the observed probability will be to the theoretical probability.

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. Frequency distributions can also be thought of as probability distributions.

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. Even when a variable is not normally distributed, the area under the normal curve can be used to calculate the probability that an event will occur for any randomly selected case.

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. If you randomly select a single case from a normal distribution, you are much more likely to select a case that is far away from the mean than close to it.

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. Probabilities are also related to the process of sampling in survey research.

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. A census relies on researchers taking samples.

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. Because of the cost in terms of both time and money to conduct a census, most survey research relies on samples.

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. Data collected from non-probability samples can be used to make any kind of generalizations about a larger population.

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. Probability sampling helps to ensure that the sample of people whom information is collected from represents the diversity of the larger population.

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. Sampling bias occurs when information is collected from a sample of cases that are systematically different from the population in some way.

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. In terms of statistical notation, N represents the number of people or cases in the sample, while n represents the number of people or cases in a population.

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. In Canadian surveys, the population is usually stratified into smaller groups based on province prior to selecting probability samples.

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. With cluster sampling researchers select cases from within clusters, not among them.

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. In multi-stage sampling, a researcher can establish the probability that an individual case will be selected by multiplying the independent probabilities of selection at each stage.

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. Even when probability sampling is used, the characteristics of a sample will never perfectly match those of the whole population.

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