Sections
Introduction

Introduction

This is a photo of a pile of grocery store receipts. The items and prices are blurred.
Figure 11.1 The chi-square distribution can be used to find relationships between two things, like grocery prices at different stores. (credit: Pete/flickr)

Chapter Objectives

By the end of this chapter, the student should be able to do the following:

  • Interpret the chi-square probability distribution as the sample size changes
  • Conduct and interpret chi-square goodness-of-fit hypothesis tests
  • Conduct and interpret chi-square test of independence hypothesis tests
  • Conduct and interpret chi-square homogeneity hypothesis tests
  • Conduct and interpret chi-square single variance hypothesis tests

Have you ever wondered if lottery numbers were evenly distributed or if some numbers occurred with a greater frequency? How about if the types of movies people preferred were different across different age groups? What about if a coffee machine was dispensing approximately the same amount of coffee each time? You could answer these questions by conducting a hypothesis test.

You will now study a new distribution, one that is used to determine the answers to such questions. This distribution is called the chi-square distribution.

In this chapter, you will learn the three major applications of the chi-square distribution:

  • The goodness-of-fit test, which determines if data fit a particular distribution, such as in the lottery example
  • The test of independence, which determines if events are independent, such as in the movie example
  • The test of a single variance, which tests variability, such as in the coffee example
NOTE

Though the chi-square distribution depends on calculators or computers for most of the calculations, there is a table available (see Table F2). TI-83+ and TI-84 calculator instructions are included in the text.

Collaborative Exercise

Look in the sports section of a newspaper or on the internet for some sports data—baseball averages, basketball scores, golf tournament scores, football odds, swimming times, and the like. Plot a histogram and a boxplot using your data. See if you can determine a probability distribution that your data fits. Have a discussion with the class about your choice.