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Thread: Basic Statistics Help

  1. #1

    Thread Starter
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    Question Basic Statistics Help

    Hello

    I have a problem, and seeing as I don't know a lot about stats I guess I need some help!

    I have to answer the question:
    With what confidence can i say that this sample came from this individual?!

    Basically, I tested 11 people, they typed 'i only read' 20 times each, and i recorded latency and dwell of keystrokes (latency being length of time between successive key strokes and dwell being the amount of time a key is held down for.)

    I have put all the loggged information onto the attached spreadsheet, and have calculated the mean and standard deviation. But now i don't know wher to go, so any suggestions on statistical methods regarding how i measure confidence in the sample would be great full.

    The final aim of the project is to try and get a computer to tell who is at the terminal by just looking at there keystrokes.


    I have been told i should be able to produce a matrix of confidence levels......but i have no idea where to start?!?

    Hopefully someone can help me.

    If you need more info leave a message or email me on [email protected] and i'll talk directly to you.

    Cheers in advance for any advice

    Andy

  2. #2
    Hyperactive Member DavidHooper's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
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    357
    OK, we all hate stats. But here we go:

    A confidence interval (CI) is a region within which a mean (or proportion) probably falls. It is based on a sample.

    That's it. Quite straightforward. For instance, I might claim that, based on this sample of 100 bananas, 3% plus-or-minus 1% of the bananas in the world are red at the 90% confidence level.

    In other words, 90% of the time, a randomly chosen banana will be red with chance 3% plus-or-minus 1%. Quite a handful. Almost literally.

    To set up a CI, you need three things (actually four, come to think about it). A mean (M), a standard deviation (s), a confidence level (C), the number of items (n) sampled and a set of normal distribution tables.

    Find C in a set of tables - it depends on how confident you want to be.

    The CI is then:
    M +/- (Cs/sqrt(n))

    Two caveats apply:
    *Things are different for proportions so concentrate on CIs for means
    *CIs only work for samples larger than about 30. If n<30 then you must use t-distribution tables which give a larger C.
    There are 10 types of people in the world - those that understand binary, and those that don't.

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