Sampling
Sampling
AND
SAMPLING DISTRIBUTION
SAMPLING
• For research work and for taking wise decisions in different
fields of human activity and business, two ways are used to
collect information namely:
Survey or Census method
Sampling method
In the Sampling method, instead of every unit of population
only a part of the population is studied and the conclusions are
drawn on that basis for the entire population. But the idea of
sampling is pretty old.
Ex: A housewife examines few grains of boiling rice to see whether
the pot of rice is ready or not. A doctor examines few drops of blood
and draws conclusion about blood constitution in the whole body. A
businessman places orders of materials by examining only a small
sample of the same. An interviewer may ask a few questions to find
the candidate suitable for a job.
PURPOSE OF SAMPLING
• Basic objective of the study is to draw inference about
the population.
Where,
and μ = Population mean
σ = Population standard deviation
μ x¯ = Sample mean
σ x¯ = Sample standard deviation
n = Sample size
Solved Examples: Question 1:The record of weights of male
population follows normal distribution. Its mean and standard
deviation are 70 kg and 15 kg respectively. If a researcher
considers the records of 50 males, then what would be the mean
and standard deviation of the chosen sample?
Solution:
Mean of the population μ = 70 kg
Standard deviation of the population = 15 kg
sample size n = 50
Mean of the sample is given by: μx¯ = 70 kg
Standard deviation of the sample is given by: σx¯ = σ/√n
σx¯ = 15/√ 50 σx¯ = 2.121 = 2.1 kg (approx)
Example: A population in which the population mean is
75 with a standard deviation of 8 (Assuming sample size
to be n =10).
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0 1 2
How about family of three?
Num. Girls child #1 child #2 child #3
0 B B B
1 B B G
1 B G B
1 G B B
2 B G G
2 G B G
2 G G B
3 G G G
Probability distribution of number of girls
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0 1 2 3
How about a family of 10?
0.3
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
As family size increases, the binomial distribution
looks more and more normal.
A C
SAMPLING DISTRIBUTION OF THE MEAN
• An example
• A die is thrown infinitely many times. Let X
represent the number of spots showing on any throw.
• The probability distribution of X is
E(X) = 1(1/6) + 2(1/6) +
x 1 2 3 4 5 6 3(1/6)+
p(x) 1/6 1/6 1/6 1/6 1/6 1/6 ………………….= 3.5
V(X) = (1-3.5)2(1/6) +
(2-3.5)2(1/6) +
……………. …= 2.92