Module Identifier MMM7010  
Module Title QUANTITATIVE METHODS (STATISTICS)  
Academic Year 2005/2006  
Co-ordinator Dr John A Lane  
Semester Semester 1  
Other staff Dr John A Lane  
Course delivery Lecture   (2 x 1-hour lectures per week)  
  Practical   (computing practical classes)  
  Other   (example classes)  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Exam2 Hours (written examination)  70%
Semester Assessment2 Hours (open book, in class test)  30%
Supplementary Exam2 Hours [If open book test passed (50% or more), mark is carried forward with weighting 30% and supplementary exam will contribute 70%. If open book test failed, supplementary exam will be 100%.]100%

Learning outcomes

On completion of this module, a student should be able to
1. identify common types of data; summarise and interpret them in business contexts.
2. calculate probabilities and conditional probabilities in a variety of situations.
3. select an appropriate probability distribution for common types of data; find relevant probabilities using tables, calculator or computer package.
4. calculate the mean, variance and standard deviation of multiples and sums of independent random variables.
5. calculate confidence intervals for single random samples and paired data.
6. formulate, carry out and interpret tests of hypotheses in common business contexts.
7. use a computer package to carry out simple data analyses, including the construction of control charts, and interpret the output.
8. use a computer package to estimate a linear relationship between two or more variables, interpret the fitted model and use it for prediction.

Brief description

The first part of the course deals with the dual but distinct problems of summarising and interpreting data and providing mathematical models for situations where there is inherent uncertainty. The latter requires material on properties of standard probability distributions. The concepts and rules are generously illustrated with examples from business or administrative contexts. The remaining part of the course is concerned with statistical inference. Here the basic ideas and elements are introduced and applied to a variety of contexts including applications to quality control.
The module will make substantial use of a statistical package for some of the calculations.

Aims

To introduce students to basic methods for summarising and interpreting data. To provide an understanding of, and working facility in, probability and statistical inference. To illustrate the uses of probability and statistics in solving business problems.

Content

1. Summarising Data. Types of data. Frequency tables, pie and barcharts; descriptive statistics, histograms, stem and leaf, box and whisker plots. Comparing data sets. X-Y scatter plots, correlation.
2. Probability. Elementary rules, symmetric situations, combinatorics, sampling with and without replacement. Applications.
3. Conditional Probability and Tree Diagrams. The chain rule, Bayes Rule. Applications. Expected value; decision making.
4. Probability Distributions. Binomial and Poisson, applications in modelling, 'rare event' model for the Poisson. Mean, variance and standard deviation, basic properties. Normal distribution, density function, use of Statistical Tables. Applications. Central Limit Theorem, approximation of the Binomial and Poisson distributions by the Normal distribution.
5. Confidence intervals. Single Normal random sample, distribution of the sample mean, confidence levels, confidence interval for the mean, with variance both known and unknown. Matched pairs. Large sample interval for the Binomial and the Poisson.
6. Hypothesis Testing. Examples for Normal, Binomial and Poisson data. Simple and composite hypotheses, critical (rejection) region, type I and II errors, P-value, significance level, power function, formulation of problems. Control charts and quality control.
7. Regression. Linear regression of y on x. Least squares estimates, the correlation coefficient, the fitted line, tests on slope and intercept, prediction.

Reading Lists

Books
** Recommended Text
J Curwin and R Slater (2001) Quantitative Methods for Business Decisions 5th edition. Thomson Learning ISBN 1-861525-311
M C Fleming and J G Nellis (2000) Principles of Applied Statistics 2nd edition. Thomas Learning ISBN 1-86152-586-9
L Swift (2001) Quantitative Methods for Business, Management and Finance Palgrave ISBN 0-333-92076-7
J Curwin and R Slater (2000) Improve your maths, a refresher course Thomson Learning ISBN 1-86152-551-6
** Supplementary Text
P Newbold (1995) Statistics for Business and Economics 4th edition. Prentice Hall ISBN 0-13-185554-9
N A Weiss (1997) Introductory Statistics 4th edition. Addison Wesley ISBN 0-201-545-675
** Recommended Background
Barbara Ryan, Brian L. Joiner (2001) Minitab Handbook 4th. Duxbury 0534370934
Moore, DS, McCabe,GP, Duckworth,WM and Sclove, SL (2003) The Practice of Business Statistics W H Freeman ISBN 0716797739

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 7