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Business Statistics Summary

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Another summary which covers the required knowledge for the Business Statistics exam. It includes all chapters we had to read and some lecture notes!!! I decided to put each chapter on a separate page to make it easier to distinguish them. Furthermore, I was unable to insert subscripts, so they are denoted throughout the summary as X1, X3, B2 et cetera. Good luck!

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Business Statistics 2017

2. Data Collection
- Observation: a single member of a collection of items that we want to study, such as a, person, firm, or
region
- Variable: a characteristic of the subject or individual, such as an employee's income
- Data Set: all the values of all of the variables for all of the observations we have chosen to observe
- Data is usually entered into a spreadsheet as an n x m matrix. Here, n are the rows representing the
observations, and m are the columns representing the variables.
- Data may consist of many variables:
1. Univariate Data Sets: one variable data set
2. Bivariate Data Sets: two variables data set
3. Multivariate Data Sets: more than two variables data set

- Categorical Data: values that are described by words rather than numbers, qualitative data,
nonnumerical values
- Categorical data may be represented using numbers. This is called coding. For example, a database
might code payment methods using numbers:
1 = cash 2 = check 3 = credit/debit card 4 = gift card
- Numerical Data: arise from counting, measuring something, or some kind of mathematical operation.
- Numerical data can be broken down into two types:
a. Discrete: a variable with a countable number of distinct values, like integers
b. Continuous: any variable that can have any value within an interval, like physical measurements
- Time Series Data: when each observation in the sample represents a different equally spaced point in
time, such as, years, months, and days.
- The periodicity is the time between observations. This can be annual, quarterly, mostly, weekly, daily,
hourly, etc.

- Cross-Sectional Data: when each observation represent a different unit at the same point in time, such
as, a person, firm, geographic area, etc.
- In cross-sectional data we look into the variation among observations or in relationships.
- Four levels of measurement for data: nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio.
- Nominal Data: identifying a category, the same as qualitative and categorical data. For example, Did
you file an insurance claim last month? 1. Yes 2. No

- Ordinal Data: connote a ranking of data values. For example, How often do you use Google? 1.
Frequently 2. Sometimes 3. Rarely 4. Never
- Interval Data: not only a rank, but has meaningful intervals between scale points. For example, Celsius
or Fahrenheit scales of temperature.



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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Ch1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16
Uploaded on
February 28, 2017
Number of pages
32
Written in
2016/2017
Type
SUMMARY

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Entire executive summary. Theories were just genoemt not declared and all helemaa nit explained. Like theories explain any examples. Here's pretty much about it.

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