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Workshop 18th - 20th May 23

Bhavan's Vivekananda College is hosting a workshop on Statistical Data Analysis & Interpretation using MS Excel from August 16th to 18th, 2022. The workshop will cover various topics including descriptive statistics, correlation, regression analysis, and fitting distributions. Participants will engage in practical exercises involving data visualization and statistical tests.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views6 pages

Workshop 18th - 20th May 23

Bhavan's Vivekananda College is hosting a workshop on Statistical Data Analysis & Interpretation using MS Excel from August 16th to 18th, 2022. The workshop will cover various topics including descriptive statistics, correlation, regression analysis, and fitting distributions. Participants will engage in practical exercises involving data visualization and statistical tests.

Uploaded by

prasanna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

Bhavan’s Vivekananda College


of Science, Humanities & Commerce
Sainikpuri, Secunderabad – 500094
(Accredited with ‘A’ grade by NAAC)
Autonomous College - Affiliated to Osmania University

Workshop

ON

Statistical Data Analysis & Interpretation using


MS Excel

DATE: 16th - 18th August, 2022

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics


BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

INDEX

SNO TOPIC

1 SIMPLE BAR DIAGRAM

SUB DIVIDED, MULTIPLE AND PERCENTAGE


2
BAR DIAGRAM

3 PIE CHART

4 HISTOGRAM, FREQUENCY POLYGON

5 OGIVE CURVE

6 DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS

7 FITTING OF A BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION

8 FITTING OF A POISSON DISTRIBUTION

9 FITTING OF A EXPONENTIAL DISTRIBUTION

10 CORRELATION AND REGRESSION ANALYSIS

11 TEST FOR MEAN(S)

12 TEST FOR EQUALITY OF VARIANCES

CHI SQUARE TEST FOR INDEPENDENCE OF


13
ATTRIBUTES

14 ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE

15 CASE STUDY

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics


BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

QUESTIONS
1. The following data gives the information of number of children involved in different
activities.
Activity Dance Music Art Cricket Foot ball
No. Of 30 40 25 20 53
Children

2. The following frequency graph shows the number of adult visitors and child visitors
to a park. Construct a side by side double bar chart and a stacked double bar chart for
the frequency table.

Month April May June


Number of adult visitors 300 500 700

Number of child visitors 200 600 600

3. Make a pie chart of people in a certain town own certain types of pets:

Dogs Cats Rodents Reptiles Fish

1110 987 312 97 398

4. In a batch of 400 students, the height of students is given in the following table.
Represent it through a frequency polygon.

Height 140 150 160 170 180


(in cms)
No.of 7 11 16 8 3
students

5. The following distribution gives the daily income of 50 workers of a factory.


Draw an Ogive curve to the given data.

Daily Income 100-120 120-140 140-160 160-180 180-200


(in Rs.)
No. Of 12 14 8 6 10
Workers

6. A high school teacher at a small private school assigns trigonometry practice


problems to be worked via the net. Students must use a password to access the
problems and the time of log-in and log-off are automatically recorded for the teacher.
At the end of the week, the teacher examines the amount of time each student spent
working the assigned problems. The data is provided below in minutes.
15 28 25 48 22 43 49 34 22 33 27 25 22 20 39
Find the Mean, Median, Mode, Standard deviation, Variance, Skewness and Kurtosis.

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics


BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

7. A machine produces a 2% of defectives on an average. If four articles are chosen


randomly, what is the probability that there will be exactly two defective articles?

8. Eight coins are tossed and number of heads noted. The experiment is repeated 205
times and the following data is obtained. Fit a Binomial distribution.

No. of Heads 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Frequencies 6 11 29 34 52 41 22 9 1

9. For the arrival of the patients at a doctor’s clinic has obtained the following
distribution for 445 days. Fit a Poisson distribution.
No. of Patients 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
No. of Days 153 169 72 31 12 6 2

10. The study of divorced cases in the western countries, the following distribution is
obtained for the time interval (in years) between the day of their marriage and day of
their divorce. Fit an exponential distribution.
No. of years 0-3 3-6 6-9 9-12 12-15 15-18
No. of persons 190 70 25 10 4 1

11. The following table gives information on ages and cholesterol levels for a random
sample of 10 men.

Age 58 69 43 39 63 52 47 31 74 36

Cholesterol
189 235 193 177 154 191 213 165 198 181
level

Find the correlation between Age and Cholesterol level and taking age as an independent
variable and cholesterol level as a dependent variable, predict the cholesterol level of a 60-
year-old man.

12. A machine being used for packaging seedless grapes has been set so that, on an
average, 20kgs will be packaged per carton with a standard deviation of 0.40kgs. The
grape garden manager wishes to test the machine setting and selects a sample of 30
cartons of grapes. Their weights are recorded as follows:

20.2 20.3 20.1 20.7 20.3 20 20.1 19.3 19.6 19.5


20 20.2 20.4 20.6 20.7 20.4 20.3 19.9 19.8 19.6
19.3 19.4 20.5 20.4 20.2 20.5 20.6 20.1 20.3 20.1

Is there evidence that the mean weight per carton is different from 20kgs?

13. A buyer wants to decide which of the two brands of electric bulbs he should buy as he
has to buy them in bulk. As a specimen, he buys 32 bulbs of each of the two brands –
A and B. On using these bulbs he finds the following data:

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics


BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

37. 50. 46. 53. 50. 49. 48. 55. 53. 52. 46. 54. 52. 50. 47. 41.
Bra 91 64 54 49 86 8 46 04 7 66 25 3 22 14 95 32
nd A 44. 48. 45. 46. 59. 49. 45. 39. 40. 48. 50. 50. 51. 51. 46. 51.
67 61 81 12 1 45 28 6 52 76 32 72 03 09 12 68
29. 45. 40. 49. 46. 44. 43. 51. 49. 48. 40. 50. 47. 45. 42. 34.
Bra 88 8 67 37 07 75 08 29 63 32 31 38 77 17 44 15
nd B 38. 43. 39. 40. 56. 44. 39. 33. 43. 45. 45. 46. 46. 40. 47.
34 27 76 15 37 32 1 32 15 44 4 9 29 36 15 1

It is known that the lifetime of brand – A and brand – B electric bulbs follow normal
distribution with standard deviation 4 and 5 respectively. Do the two brands differ
significantly with respect to average lifetimes at 5% LOS?

14. A random sample of 9 boys had the following IQs. 70, 120, 110, 101, 88, 95, 98, 107,
100. Does this data support the assumption of a population mean IQ of 100?

15. A group of 5 patients treated with medicine – A weights 42, 39, 48, 60 and 41; a
second group of 7 patients from the same hospital treated with medicine – B weights
38, 42, 56, 64, 68, 69 and 62 kgs. Do you agree with the claim that there is no
significant difference in two medicines?

16. The sales data of a product before and after advertisement are given below.
Shop 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Sales (before
60 65 55 52 58 63 61 59
advertisement)
Sales (after
65 68 52 48 55 60 68 66
advertisement)

Can the advertisement be judged as affective?

17. Two samples are drawn from two normal populations. Test whether the two samples
have the same variances at 5% level.
Sample 1 61 66 67 85 78 63 85 86 88 91
Sample 2 60 65 71 74 76 82 85 87

18. The results of a survey to know the educational attainment among 100 persons,
randomly selected in a locality, are given below.

Education
Gender Middle High
College
school school
Male 10 15 25
Female 25 10 15
Can you say that education depends on gender?

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics


BHAVAN’S VIVEKANANDA COLLEGE, SAINIKPURI, SECUNDERABAD

19. 3 Processors, A, B and C are tested to see whether their outputs are equivalent. The
following observations of output are given below:

A 20. 10 21. 12 22. 13 23. 11 24. 10

B 25. 9 26. 11 27. 10 28. 12 29. 13

C 30. 11 31. 10 32. 15 33. 14 34. 12

Carry out ANOVA and also state the conclusion.

20. Three varieties of coal were analysed by 4 chemists. Ash contain in 3 varieties was
found as under.

Chemists
Variety of
Coal I II III III

A 18 15 15 17

B 17 16 14 14

C 13 16 15 14

Check whether the varieties differ significantly in its ash content. Also test the
significant between the chemists.

Dr. A. Rajini, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics & Statistics

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