Research Methods 2
Topic 5: The Properties of the
Normal distribution (Week 5)
Aims
To explain, in quantitative terms, what it means for
a variable to have a Normal distribution.
Objectives
To understand that it is the area under the bell-shaped
Normal curve that is most readily interpreted.
To know that the area under the whole curve is 1.
Also that the area under the curve up to a given point, X, is the
proportion of the population with values that are less than X.
To be able to use simple arguments of symmetry to
deduce how other quantities of interest, such as the proportion of the
population with values between two given points, might be calculated.
To know the 68-95-99.7 rule for the Normal distribution.
This week there is only one document to be studied
and one exercise sheet. You will be studying the Normal distribution
in a little more depth and learning some of the quantitative implications
that follow from an assumption that a variable has a Normal distribution.
Some of the facts will be of use in their own right but a good deal of
what you learn this week is of value because of how we will use it in the
next few weeks.
Further reading on the topics addressed this week
can be found in Bland, chapter 7
You should now attempt the first set of true/false
questions.