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Introductory Biostatistics: Week 10 Practice Problems in Confidence Intervals, Study notes of Biostatistics

Practice problems for unit 6 of introductory biostatistics course, focusing on confidence intervals for binomial proportions, normal distribution, and paired data. Students are required to compute confidence intervals for various scenarios, including egg masses of a harmful insect, age at diagnosis of alzheimer's disease, serum cholesterol levels, and diastolic blood pressure during caesarian section.

Typology: Study notes

Pre 2010

Uploaded on 08/19/2009

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Download Introductory Biostatistics: Week 10 Practice Problems in Confidence Intervals and more Study notes Biostatistics in PDF only on Docsity! PubHlth 540 Introductory Biostatistics Page 1 of 3 Unit 6 – Estimation Week #10 - Practice Problems Due: Monday December 1, 2008 1. Before you begin: This exercise is a straightforward confidence interval calculation for a binomial proportion. See lecture notes pp 60-64 and/or text pp 205-206. An entomologist samples a field for egg masses of a harmful insect by placing a yard- square frame at random locations and carefully examining the ground within the frame. A simple random sample of 75 locations selected from a county’s pasture land found egg masses in 13 locations. Compute a 95 confidence interval estimate of all possible locations that are infested. 2. Before you begin: This exercise is NOT a mimicking of the lecture notes. It is asking you to start your thinking from the WIDTH of a confidence interval and then reason your solution from there. Have a look at the lecture notes page 21. See also text pp 187-194. Alzheimers’ disease has a poorer prognosis when it is diagnosed at a relatively young age. Suppose we want to estimate the age at which the disease was first diagnosed using a 90% confidence interval. Under the assumption that the distribution of age at diagnosis is normal, if the population variance is σ2=85, how large a sample size is required if we want a confidence interval that is 10 years wide? 3. Before you begin: In this exercise, you get practice in combining the ideas of estimation in unit 6 and the z- score methods that you learned in unit 5. In unit 6, see page 46. In unit 5, see page 19. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of 1975-1980 give the following data on serum cholesterol levels in US males. Group Age, years Population Mean, μ Population Standard Deviation, σ 1 20-24 180 43 2 25-34 199 49 Suppose the distribution of serum cholesterol is normal in each age group. If you draw simple random samples of size 50 from each of the two groups, what is the probability that the difference between the two sample means (Group 2 mean – Group 1 mean) will be more than 25? Source: National Center or Health Statistics, R. Fulwood, W. Kalsbeek, B. Rifkind, et al. “Total serum cholesterol levels of adults 20-74 years of age: United States, 1976-1980”. Vital and Health Statistics Series 11, No. 236. DHHS Pub. No (PHD) 86-1686, Public Health Service, Washington, DC, US Government Printing Office, May 1986. Cited in Daniel (p 140, 5.4.1 Copyright 1999 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. By permission of John Wiley. Wk10_practice.doc PubHlth 540 Introductory Biostatistics Page 2 of 3 4. Before you begin: The solution to this exercise uses the same approach that is described on page 37 of the unit 6 lecture notes. Also the example on page 38. Pages in the text are pp 199-201. The objectives of a study by Kennedy and Bhambhani (1991) were to use physiological measurements to determine the test-retest reliability of the Baltimore Therapeutic Equipment Work Simulator during three simulated tasks performed at light, medium, and heavy work intensities, and to examine the criterion validity of these tasks by comparing them to real tasks performed in a controlled laboratory setting. Subjects were 30 healthy men between the ages of 18 and 35. The investigators reported a standard deviation of s=0.57 for the variable peak oxygen consumption (1/min) during one of the procedures. Assuming normality, compute a 95% confidence interval for the population variance for the oxygen consumption variable. 5. Before you begin: This exercise draws from the material presented on pp 40-44 of the unit 6 notes. Because two measurements are made on each patient, the data in this exercise are “paired”. The purpose of an investigation by Alahuhta et al (1991) was to evaluate the influence of extradural block for elective caesarian section simultaneously on several maternal and fetal hemodynamic variables and to determine if the block modified fetal myocardial function. The study subjects were eight healthy parturient in gestational weeks 38-42 with uncomplicated singleton pregnancies undergoing elective caesarian section under extradural anesthesia. Among the measurements taken, were maternal diastolic arterial pressure during two stages of the study. The following are the lowest values of this variable at the two stages. Compute a 95% confidence interval for the difference in diastolic blood pressure between the two stages. Patient ID 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Stage 1 70 87 72 70 73 66 63 57 Stage 2 79 87 73 77 80 64 64 60 Source: Alahuhta S., Rasanen J, Jouppila R, Jouppila P., and Kangas-Saarela T., and Hoomen AI (1991)”Uteroplacental and fetal hemoydynamics during extradural anesthesia for caesarian section”, British Journal of Anesthesia, 66: 319-323. Cited in Daniel (p 248, 7.4.3) Copyright 1999 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. By permission of John Wiley. Wk10_practice.doc
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