Guide to Business Statistics (eBook)

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2018 | 1. Auflage
208 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-119-13836-5 (ISBN)

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Guide to Business Statistics -  David M. McEvoy
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An accessible text that explains fundamental concepts in business statistics that are often obscured by formulae and mathematical notation A Guide to Business Statistics offers a practical approach to statistics that covers the fundamental concepts in business and economics. The book maintains the level of rigor of a more conventional textbook in business statistics but uses a more stream lined and intuitive approach. In short, A Guide to Business Statistics provides clarity to the typical statistics textbook cluttered with notation and formulae. The author an expert in the field offers concise and straightforward explanations to the core principles and techniques in business statistics. The concepts are intro duced through examples, and the text is designed to be accessible to readers with a variety of backgrounds. To enhance learning, most of the mathematical formulae and notation appears in technical appendices at the end of each chapter. This important resource: Offers a comprehensive guide to understanding business statistics targeting business and economics students and professionals Introduces the concepts and techniques through concise and intuitive examples Focuses on understanding by moving distracting formulae and mathematical notation to appendices Offers intuition, insights, humor, and practical advice for students of business statistics Features coverage of sampling techniques, descriptive statistics, probability, sampling distributions, confidence intervals, hypothesis tests, and regression Written for undergraduate business students, business and economics majors, teachers, and practitioners, A Guide to Business Statistics offers an accessible guide to the key concepts and fundamental principles in statistics.

DAVID M. MCEVOY, PHD, is an Associate Professor in the Economics Department at Appalachian State University in Boone NC. He has published over 20 peer-reviewed articles and is coeditor of two books. Dr. McEvoy is an award-winning educator who has taught undergraduate courses in business statistics for over 10 years.

Dedication

Preface

0.1. Addressing two challenges

0.2. How to use this book

0.3. Target audience

Chapter 1: Types of Data

1.1. Categorical data

1.2. Numerical data

1.3. Level of measurement

1.4. Cross-sectional, time-series and panel data

1.5. Summary

Chapter 2: Populations and Samples

2.1. What is the population of interest?

2.2. How to sample from a population?

2.3. Getting the data

2.4. Summary

Chapter 3: Descriptive Statistics

3.1. Measures of central tendency

3.2. Measures of variability

3.3. The shape

3.4. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 4: Probability

4.1. Simple probabilities

4.2. Empirical probabilities

4.3. Conditional probabilities

4.4. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 5: The Normal Distribution

5.1. The bell shape

5.2. The Empirical Rule

5.3. Standard normal distribution

5.4. Normal approximations

5.5. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 6: Sampling Distributions

6.1. Defining a sampling distribution

6.2. The importance of sampling distributions

6.3. An example of a sampling distribution

6.4. Characteristics of a sampling distribution of a mean

6.5. Sampling distribution of a proportion

6.6. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 7: Confidence Intervals

7.1. Confidence intervals for means

7.2. Confidence intervals for proportions

7.3. Sample size and the width of confidence intervals

7.4. Comparing two proportions from the same poll

7.5. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 8: Hypothesis Tests of a Population Mean

8.1. Two-tail hypothesis test of a mean

8.2. One-tail hypothesis test of a mean

8.3. p-value approach to hypothesis tests

8.4. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 9: Hypothesis Tests of Categorical Data

9.1. Two-tail hypothesis test of a proportion

9.2. One-tail hypothesis test of a proportion

9.3. Using p-values

9.4. Chi-square tests

9.5. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 10: Hypothesis Tests Comparing Two Parameters

10.1. The approach in this chapter

10.2. Hypothesis tests of two means

10.3. Hypothesis tests of two variances

10.4. Hypothesis tests of two proportions

10.5. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 11: Simple Linear Regression

11.1. The population regression model

11.2. A look at the data

11.3. Ordinary Least Squares (OLS)

11.4. The distribution of b0 and b1

11.5. Tests of significance

11.6. Goodness of fit

11.7. Checking for violations of the assumptions

11.8. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 12: Multiple Regression

12.1. Population regression model

12.2. The data

12.3. Sample regression function

12.4. Interpreting the estimates

12.5. Prediction

12.6. Tests of significance

12.7. Goodness of fit

12.8. Multicollinearity

12.9. Summary

Technical Appendix

Chapter 13: More Topics in Regression

13.1. Hypothesis tests comparing two means with regression

13.2. Hypothesis tests comparing more than two means (ANOVA)

13.3. Interacting variables

13.4. Non-linearities

13.5. Time-series analysis

13.6. Summary

Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 7.3.2018
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Mathematik / Informatik Mathematik Finanz- / Wirtschaftsmathematik
Mathematik / Informatik Mathematik Statistik
Mathematik / Informatik Mathematik Wahrscheinlichkeit / Kombinatorik
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre Ökonometrie
Schlagworte Business & Corporate Economics • Business & Management • Business Statistics & Math • Economics • Finanz- u. Wirtschaftsstatistik • Statistics • Statistics for Finance, Business & Economics • Statistik • Volks- u. Betriebswirtschaftslehre • Volkswirtschaftslehre • Wirtschaftsmathematik • Wirtschaftsmathematik u. -statistik • Wirtschaftsstatistik • Wirtschaft u. Management
ISBN-10 1-119-13836-1 / 1119138361
ISBN-13 978-1-119-13836-5 / 9781119138365
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