Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel / Edition 8 available in Other Format

Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel / Edition 8
- ISBN-10:
- 0134173910
- ISBN-13:
- 9780134173917
- Pub. Date:
- 01/27/2016
- Publisher:
- Pearson Education

Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel / Edition 8
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Overview
"For undergraduate business statistics courses.
" "This package includes MyStatLab . " Analyzing the Data Applicable to Business This text is the gold standard for learning how to use Microsoft Excel(r) in business statistics, helping students gain the understanding they need to be successful in their careers. The authors present statistics in the context of specific business fields; full chapters on business analytics further prepare students for success in their professions. Current data throughout the text lets students practice analyzing the types of data they will see in their professions. The friendly writing style include tips throughout to encourage learning. The book also integrates PHStat, an add-in that bolsters the statistical functions of Excel. Personalize learning with MyStatLab MyStatLab is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to engage students and improve results. Within its structured environment, students practice what they learn, test their understanding, and pursue a personalized study plan that helps them absorb course material and understand difficult concepts.
0134465970 / 9780134465975 Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel Plus MyStatLab with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package, 8/e Package consists of: 0134173058 / 9780134173054 Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel 032192147X / 9780321921475 MyStatLab for Business Statistics -- Glue-In Access Card 0321929713 / 9780321929716 MyStatLab for Business Statistics Sticker
"
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780134173917 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Pearson Education |
Publication date: | 01/27/2016 |
Edition description: | Student |
Pages: | 744 |
Product dimensions: | 8.20(w) x 10.80(h) x 1.00(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Educational Philosophy
In our many years of teaching introductory statistics courses, we have continually searched for ways to improve the teaching of these courses. Our vision for teaching these introductory business statistics courses has been shaped by active participation in a series of Making Statistics More Effective in Schools of Business, Decision Sciences Institute, and American Statistical Association conferences as well as the reality of serving a diverse group of students at large universities. Over the years, our vision has come to include these principles:
- Students need a frame of reference when learning statistics, especially since statistics is not their major. That frame of reference for business students should be the functional areas of businessthat is, accounting, economics and finance, information systems, management, and marketing. Each statistical topic needs to be presented in an applied context related to at least one of these functional areas.
- Virtually all the students taking introductory business statistics courses are majoring in areas other than statistics. Introductory courses should focus on underlying principles that non-statistics majors will find useful.
- The use of spreadsheet and/or statistical software should be integrated into all aspects of an introductory statistics course. In the workplace, spreadsheet software (and sometimes statistical software) is usually available on a decision maker's desktop. Our teaching approach needs to recognize this reality, and we need to make our courses more consistent with the workplace environment.
- Textbooks that use software must provide enoughinstructions that students can effectively use the software, without the software (and instruction) dominating the course.
- The focus in teaching each topic should be on the application of the topic to a functional area of business, the interpretation of results, the presentation of assumptions, the evaluation of the assumptions, and the discussion of what should be done if the assumptions are violated. These points are particularly important in regression and forecasting and in hypothesis testing. Although the illustration of some computations is inevitable, the focus on computations should be minimized.
- Both classroom examples and homework exercises should relate to actual or realistic data as much as possible. Students should work with data sets, both small and large, and be encouraged to look beyond the statistical analysis of data to the interpretation of results in a managerial context.
- Introductory courses should avoid an overconcentration on one topic area (such as hypothesis testing) and instead provide breadth of coverage of a variety of statistical topics. This will help students avoid the "I can't see the forest from the trees" syndrome.
Features of This Text
When planning this textbook, we focused on how desktop productivity tools, such as spreadsheets, have altered managers' decision-making processes. Whereas managers once had to turn to a Management Information Systems Department to obtain customized summaries of corporate data, today an increasing number of managers use spreadsheet applications as the means to retrieve and directly analyze the data they need. In this context, employers now are beginning to desire, if not demand, that their college-educated, entry-level employees have more than just a cursory awareness of spreadsheet applications. These changes, along with the realization that current spreadsheet applications can assist in performing the types of analyses once done only by specialized statistical software packages, led us to develop Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel.
Therefore, we take the position that using Microsoft Excel can play a valuable role in learning statistics. Our focus emphasizes analyzing data, interpreting the output from Microsoft Excel, and explaining how to use this software while reducing the emphasis on doing computations. Therefore, we have included a great deal of Excel output and integrated this output into the fabric of the text. For example, in the coverage of tables and charts in Chapter 2, the focus is on the interpretation of various charts, not on their construction by hand. In our coverage of hypothesis testing in Chapters 7 through 10, extensive Excel output has been included so that the p-value approach can be used. In our coverage of simple linear regression in Chapter 11, we assume that Microsoft Excel will be used, and thus the focus is on the interpretation of the output, and not on hand calculations (which have been placed in a separate section of the chapter).
New to This Edition
This new third edition of Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel has been enhanced in a number of important areas.
COVERAGE OF EXCEL
A major thrust of this revision is to refine the presentation of the Microsoft Excel-related material. To that end, this edition contains the following enhancements:
- Excel output for interpretation has been integrated directly into the examples. Results for many of the examples are now presented as screen shots from actual Excel worksheets.
- Simple-to-use Excel instructions are conveniently located after the discussion of a statistical topic. These instructions allow readers to generate statistical results quickly through the extensive use of PHStat2 (see below) and the wizards and add-ins that comprise Microsoft Excel. Sets of instructions are highlighted with a color tint for easy reference and are typically a page or less in length.
- Detailed instructions for implementing worksheet solutions are presented in end of chapter "Excel Handbook" sections. Those who want to learn about Microsoft Excel or those who cannot or choose not to use PHStat2 can use these instructions to generate statistical results. This way, the detailed instructions are there for those who want them, but those who do not can easily skip the instructions. (All will find the Handbooks helpful for understanding how PHStat2 generates its results.)
- New or streamlined Excel instructions for a variety of methods including producing dot scale diagrams, histograms, multiple polygons, and stepwise regression.
- PHStat2, the latest version of PHStat, Prentice Hall's statistical add-in for Microsoft Excel for Windows. PHStat2 contains a number of new or enhanced procedures and now includes a full help system for easy reference.
APPLICATIONS
- Updated and improved Using Statistics business scenariosEach chapter begins with a Using Statistics example that shows how statistics can be used in one of the functional areas of businessaccounting, finance, management, marketing or information systems. This scenario is used throughout the chapter to provide an applied context for the concepts.
- Hundreds of new applied examples and exercises with data from the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and other sources have been added to the text.
- Visual ExplorationsIncluded on the CD-ROM that accompanies this textbook. Visual Explorations in Statistics is a Microsoft Excel add-in that allows students to interactively explore important statistical concepts in descriptive statistics, probability, the normal distribution, and regression analysis. For example, in descriptive statistics, students observe the effect of changes in the data on the average, median, quartiles, and standard deviation. In sampling distributions, students use simulation to explore the effect of sample size on a probability distribution. With the normal distribution, students see the effect of changes in the mean and standard deviation on the areas under the normal curve. In regression analysis, students have the opportunity of fitting a line and observing how changes in the slope and intercept affect the goodness of fit of the fitted line.
- Using Microsoft Office sections. Located at the end of selected chapters, this feature discusses ways in which users can share data between Microsoft Excel and other components of Microsoft Office, including Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint, and the web browser Internet Explorer. Detailed, step-by-step instructions explain how to incorporate an Excel worksheet or chart in a Word document or a PowerPoint presentation, as well as how to save Excel worksheets and charts as html World Wide Web pages and how to retrieve and import data from the World Wide Web using Internet Explorer.
EXERCISES
- Answers to most of the even-numbered exercises are provided at the end of the book.
- Report Writing exercises allow students to place the results of an analysis in a business context by incorporating Microsoft Office techniques such as pasting Microsoft Excel tables and charts into a Microsoft Word document and PowerPoint presentation.
- Internet Exercises, located on the book's web site, allow students to explore data sources available on the World Wide Web.
- Case Studies and Team ProjectsDetailed case studies are included at the ends of many chapters. The Springville Herald case is included at the end of most chapters as an integrating theme. A Team Project relating to mutual funds is also included at the end of most chapters as an integrating theme.
CONTENT CHANGES IN THE THIRD EDITION
- Chapter 1 ("Introduction and Data Collection") contains additional chapter review problems on accessing the Internet and a new Using Statistics example involving an Internet company.
- The Excel Primer has been reorganized and updated for Excel 2000.
- Chapter 2 ("Presenting Data in Tables and Charts") contains an updated Using Statistics example, new graphical excellence examples, a section on the scatter diagram, and a section on placing Microsoft Excel worksheet data and charts in Microsoft Word documents.
- Chapter 3 ("Descriptive Statistics") contains an updated Using Statistics example, additional integration of Excel output, coverage of the correlation coefficient, coverage of the geometric mean (which finance students especially need), a Visual Explorations module on descriptive statistics, and placing Microsoft Excel worksheet data and charts in PowerPoint presentations.
- Chapter 4 ("Basic Probability and Discrete Probability Distributions") changes the Using Statistics binomial example to an accounting information system, moves covariance so that it follows expected value, and uses an example with a negative covariance.
- Chapter 5 ("The Normal Distribution and Sampling Distributions") changes the Using Statistics example to an Internet example, uses only the cumulative normal table, integrates Excel output into the normal distribution section and contains Visual Explorations modules for the normal distribution and sampling distributions.
- Chapter 6 ("Confidence Interval Estimation") adds one-sided confidence intervals to the section on auditing and moves the finite population correction factor to the CD-ROM.
- Chapter 7 ("Fundamentals of Hypothesis Testing: One-Sample Tests") adds computer output to all sections and combines sections 7.2 and 7.3 so that p-values are not covered in a separate section.
- Chapter 8 ("Two-Sample Tests with Numerical Data") changes the Using Statistics example to one related to marketing and provides additional emphasis on p-values, adds the confidence interval estimate for the difference between two means, and discusses the t test for the difference between the means when the variances are not equal.
- Chapter 9 ("Analysis of Variance") changes the Using Statistics example, adds computer output, and provides additional emphasis on p-values.
- Chapter 10 ("Tests for Two or More Samples with Categorical Data") adds the confidence interval estimate for the difference between two proportions.
- Chapter 11 ("Simple Linear Regression") adds more coverage of PHStat, contains a Visual Explorations module on regression, and includes a section on saving Microsoft Excel worksheets and charts as web pages.
- Chapter 12 ("Multiple Regression") changes the Using Statistics example to a marketing problem, includes additional discussion of interaction terms in multiple regression, and adds new PHStat2 features to the section on stepwise regression and confidence intervals for the mean response.
- Chapter 13 ("Time-Series Analysis") changes the Using Statistics example, adds a section on index numbers that appears on the CD-ROM, and includes a section on how to retrieve and import data from the World Wide Web using Internet Explorer.
- Chapter 14 ("Decision Making") has been moved after the regression and time series forecasting chapters.
- Chapter 15 ("Statistical Applications in Quality and Productivity Management") has been moved after the regression and time series chapters and adds a section on process capability.
SUPPLEMENT PACKAGE
The supplement package that accompanies this text includes the following:
- Instructor's Solution ManualThis manual includes extra detail in the problem solutions and many Excel solutions.
- Student Solutions ManualThis manual provides detailed solutions to virtually all the even-numbered exercises.
- Test Item FileThis supplement includes extra Excel-based test questions.
- Instructor's CD/ROMThe instructor's CD-ROM contains PowerPoint slides, the Instructor's Solutions Manual and Test Item File, and Prentice Hall's Custom Test Manager.
- PHStat2This is a statistical add-in for Microsoft Excel for Windows. The data files for the examples and exercises are contained on the CDROM that accompanies the text.
- MyPHLIP Web siteThis site contains additional problems, teaching tips, tips for students, current events exercises, practice exams, and links to other sites that contain statistical data.
ABOUT THE WORLD WIDE WEB
The text has a home page on the World Wide Web.
This site incorporates the features of MyPHLIP (Prentice Hall's Learning on the Internet Partnership), a robust Web site that contains many resources for both faculty members and students. A partial list of the features includes:
- Teaching tips
- Links to other sites that provide data appropriate for statistics courses
- Student tips
- Sample Exams
- Current Event exercises
- Internet Exercises
Table of Contents
Preface | xiii | |
1 | Introduction and Data Collection | 1 |
1.1 | Why a Manager Needs to Know About Statistics | 2 |
1.2 | The Growth and Development of Modern Statistics | 4 |
1.3 | What Every Manager Needs to Know About Using Electronic Worksheets | 4 |
1.4 | What You Need to Know About Using the Software for This Textbook | 5 |
1.5 | Why Are Data Needed | 6 |
1.6 | Sources of Data | 7 |
1.7 | Types of Data | 9 |
1.8 | Types of Sampling Methods | 11 |
1.9 | Evaluating Survey Worthiness | 17 |
Excel Primer | 27 | |
EP.1 | Working with Windows and Microsoft Excel | 28 |
EP.2 | Common Workbook Operations | 32 |
EP.3 | Basic Worksheet Concepts and Operations | 36 |
EP.4 | Enhancing Worksheet Appearance | 39 |
EP.5 | Using Microsoft Excel Wizards | 40 |
EP.6 | Using Add-Ins | 43 |
2 | Presenting Data in Tables and Charts | 45 |
2.1 | Organizing Numerical Data | 46 |
2.2 | Tables and Charts for Numerical Data | 51 |
2.3 | Graphing Bivariate Numerical Data | 62 |
2.4 | Tables and Charts for Categorical Data | 65 |
2.5 | Tabulating and Graphing Bivariate Categorical Data | 73 |
2.6 | Graphical Excellence | 79 |
3 | Numerical Descriptive Measures | 107 |
3.1 | Exploring Numerical Data and Their Properties | 108 |
3.2 | Measures of Central Tendency, Variation, and Shape | 109 |
3.3 | Exploratory Data Analysis | 129 |
3.4 | Obtaining Descriptive Summary Measures from a Population | 134 |
3.5 | The Coefficient of Correlation | 138 |
3.6 | Pitfalls in Numerical Descriptive Measures and Ethical Issues | 143 |
4 | Basic Probability and Discrete Probability Distribution | 159 |
4.1 | Basic Probability Concepts | 161 |
4.2 | Conditional Probability | 170 |
4.3 | Bayes' Theorem | 178 |
4.4 | The Probability Distribution for a Discrete Random Variable | 182 |
4.5 | Covariance and Its Application in Finance | 186 |
4.6 | Binomial Distribution | 191 |
4.7 | Poisson Distribution | 200 |
4.8 | Hypergeometric Distribution | 204 |
4.9 | Ethical Issues and Probability | 207 |
5 | The Normal Distribution and Sampling Distributions | 223 |
5.1 | The Normal Distribution | 224 |
5.2 | Evaluating the Normality Assumption | 242 |
5.3 | The Exponential Distribution | 250 |
5.4 | Introduction to Sampling Distributions | 253 |
5.5 | Sampling Distribution of the Mean | 253 |
5.6 | Sampling Distribution of the Proportion | 266 |
5.7 | Sampling from Finite Populations (CD-ROM Topic) | 270 |
6 | Confidence Interval Estimation | 283 |
6.1 | Confidence Interval Estimation of the Mean ([sigma] Known) | 285 |
6.2 | Confidence Interval Estimation of the Mean ([sigma] Unknown) | 290 |
6.3 | Confidence Interval Estimation for the Proportion | 297 |
6.4 | Determining Sample Size | 301 |
6.5 | Applications of Confidence Interval Estimation in Auditing | 309 |
6.6 | Confidence Interval Estimation and Ethical Issues | 317 |
6.7 | Estimation and Sample Size Determination for Finite Populations (CD-ROM Topic) | 319 |
7 | Fundamentals of Hypothesis Testing: One-Sample Tests | 333 |
7.1 | Hypothesis-Testing Methodology | 334 |
7.2 | Z Test of Hypothesis for the Mean ([sigma] Known) | 339 |
7.3 | One-Tail Tests | 347 |
7.4 | tTest of Hypothesis for the Mean ([sigma] Unknown) | 350 |
7.5 | Z Test of Hypothesis for the Proportion | 357 |
7.6 | Potential Hypothesis-Testing Pitfalls and Ethical Issues | 361 |
8 | Two-Sample Tests with Numerical Data | 373 |
8.1 | Comparing Two Independent Samples: t Tests for Differences Between Two Means | 374 |
8.2 | F Test for Differences Between Two Variances | 385 |
8.3 | Comparing Two Related Samples: t Test for the Mean Difference | 394 |
8.4 | Wilcoxon Rank Sum Test for Differences Between Two Medians | 402 |
9 | Analysis of Variance | 421 |
9.1 | The Completely Randomized Design: One-Way Analysis of Variance | 422 |
9.2 | The Two-Factor Factorial Design: Two-Way Analysis of Variance | 437 |
9.3 | The Kruskal-Wallis Rank Test for Differences Between Medians | 450 |
10 | Tests for Two or More Samples with Categorical Data | 469 |
10.1 | Z Test for the Difference Between Two Proportions | 470 |
10.2 | x[superscript 2] Test for the Difference Between Two Proportions | 477 |
10.3 | x[superscript 2] Test for Differences Between More Than Two Proportions | 485 |
10.4 | x[superscript 2] Test of Independence | 492 |
11 | Simple Linear Regression | 511 |
11.1 | Types of Regression Models | 512 |
11.2 | Determining the Simple Linear Regression Equation | 514 |
11.3 | Measures of Variation | 524 |
11.4 | Assumptions | 529 |
11.5 | Residual Analysis | 530 |
11.6 | Measuring Autocorrelation: The Durbin-Watson Statistic | 535 |
11.7 | Inferences About the Slope and Correlation Coefficient | 541 |
11.8 | Estimation of Mean and Prediction of Individual Values | 547 |
11.9 | Pitfalls in Regression and Ethical Issues | 552 |
11.10 | Computations in Simple Linear Regression | 556 |
12 | Multiple Regression | 581 |
12.1 | Developing the Multiple Regression Model | 582 |
12.2 | Residual Analysis for the Multiple Regression Model | 591 |
12.3 | Testing for the Significance of the Multiple Regression Model | 594 |
12.4 | Inferences Concerning the Population Regression Coefficients | 596 |
12.5 | Testing Portions of the Multiple Regression Model | 600 |
12.6 | The Quadratic Regression Model | 606 |
12.7 | Dummy Variable Models | 615 |
12.8 | Using Transformations in Regression Models | 624 |
12.9 | Collinearity | 628 |
12.10 | Model Building | 630 |
12.11 | Pitfalls in Multiple Regression and Ethical Issues | 641 |
13 | Time-Series Analysis | 653 |
13.1 | The Importance of Business Forecasting | 654 |
13.2 | Component Factors of the Classical Multiplicative Time-Series Model | 655 |
13.3 | Smoothing the Annual Time Series | 657 |
13.4 | Least-Squares Trend Fitting and Forecasting | 668 |
13.5 | Autoregressive Modeling for Trend Fitting and Forecasting | 684 |
13.6 | Choosing an Appropriate Forecasting Model | 694 |
13.7 | Time-Series Forecasting of Monthly or Quarterly Data | 700 |
13.8 | Pitfalls Concerning Time-Series Analysis | 708 |
13.9 | Index Numbers (CD-ROM Topic) | 709 |
14 | Decision Making | 719 |
14.1 | The Payoff Table and Decision Trees | 720 |
14.2 | Criteria for Decision Making | 725 |
14.3 | Decision Making with Sample Information | 734 |
14.4 | Utility | 739 |
15 | Statistical Applications in Quality and Productivity Management | 749 |
15.1 | Quality and Productivity: A Historical Perspective | 751 |
15.2 | Deming's 14 Points: A Theory of Management | 751 |
15.3 | The Theory of Control Charts | 754 |
15.4 | Control Charts for the Proportion of Nonconforming Items: p Charts | 756 |
15.5 | The Red Bead Experiment: Understanding Process Variability | 762 |
15.6 | Control Charts for the Range and the Mean | 765 |
15.7 | Process Capability | 772 |
Answers to Selected Problems | 792 | |
Appendices | 805 | |
A. | Review of Arithmetic, Algebra, and Logarithms | 805 |
B. | Summation Notation | 809 |
C. | Statistical Symbols and the Greek Alphabet | 815 |
D. | CD-ROM Contents | 817 |
E. | Tables | 831 |
F. | Microsoft Excel Configuration and Customization | 863 |
G. | More About PHStat2 | 869 |
Index | 873 | |
CD-ROM Topics | ||
5.7 | Sampling from Finite Populations | 1 |
6.7 | Estimation and Sample Size Determination for Finite Populations | 1 |
13.9 | Index Numbers | 1 |
Preface
Educational Philosophy
In our many years of teaching introductory statistics courses, we have continually searched for ways to improve the teaching of these courses. Our vision for teaching these introductory business statistics courses has been shaped by active participation in a series of Making Statistics More Effective in Schools of Business, Decision Sciences Institute, and American Statistical Association conferences as well as the reality of serving a diverse group of students at large universities. Over the years, our vision has come to include these principles:
- Students need a frame of reference when learning statistics, especially since statistics is not their major. That frame of reference for business students should be the functional areas of businessthat is, accounting, economics and finance, information systems, management, and marketing. Each statistical topic needs to be presented in an applied context related to at least one of these functional areas.
- Virtually all the students taking introductory business statistics courses are majoring in areas other than statistics. Introductory courses should focus on underlying principles that non-statistics majors will find useful.
- The use of spreadsheet and/or statistical software should be integrated into all aspects of an introductory statistics course. In the workplace, spreadsheet software (and sometimes statistical software) is usually available on a decision maker's desktop. Our teaching approach needs to recognize this reality, and we need to make our courses more consistent with the workplace environment.
- Textbooks that use software must provide enoughinstructions that students can effectively use the software, without the software (and instruction) dominating the course.
- The focus in teaching each topic should be on the application of the topic to a functional area of business, the interpretation of results, the presentation of assumptions, the evaluation of the assumptions, and the discussion of what should be done if the assumptions are violated. These points are particularly important in regression and forecasting and in hypothesis testing. Although the illustration of some computations is inevitable, the focus on computations should be minimized.
- Both classroom examples and homework exercises should relate to actual or realistic data as much as possible. Students should work with data sets, both small and large, and be encouraged to look beyond the statistical analysis of data to the interpretation of results in a managerial context.
- Introductory courses should avoid an overconcentration on one topic area (such as hypothesis testing) and instead provide breadth of coverage of a variety of statistical topics. This will help students avoid the "I can't see the forest from the trees" syndrome.
Features of This Text
When planning this textbook, we focused on how desktop productivity tools, such as spreadsheets, have altered managers' decision-making processes. Whereas managers once had to turn to a Management Information Systems Department to obtain customized summaries of corporate data, today an increasing number of managers use spreadsheet applications as the means to retrieve and directly analyze the data they need. In this context, employers now are beginning to desire, if not demand, that their college-educated, entry-level employees have more than just a cursory awareness of spreadsheet applications. These changes, along with the realization that current spreadsheet applications can assist in performing the types of analyses once done only by specialized statistical software packages, led us to develop Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel.
Therefore, we take the position that using Microsoft Excel can play a valuable role in learning statistics. Our focus emphasizes analyzing data, interpreting the output from Microsoft Excel, and explaining how to use this software while reducing the emphasis on doing computations. Therefore, we have included a great deal of Excel output and integrated this output into the fabric of the text. For example, in the coverage of tables and charts in Chapter 2, the focus is on the interpretation of various charts, not on their construction by hand. In our coverage of hypothesis testing in Chapters 7 through 10, extensive Excel output has been included so that the p-value approach can be used. In our coverage of simple linear regression in Chapter 11, we assume that Microsoft Excel will be used, and thus the focus is on the interpretation of the output, and not on hand calculations (which have been placed in a separate section of the chapter).
New to This Edition
This new third edition of Statistics for Managers Using Microsoft Excel has been enhanced in a number of important areas.
COVERAGE OF EXCEL
A major thrust of this revision is to refine the presentation of the Microsoft Excel-related material. To that end, this edition contains the following enhancements:
- Excel output for interpretation has been integrated directly into the examples. Results for many of the examples are now presented as screen shots from actual Excel worksheets.
- Simple-to-use Excel instructions are conveniently located after the discussion of a statistical topic. These instructions allow readers to generate statistical results quickly through the extensive use of PHStat2 (see below) and the wizards and add-ins that comprise Microsoft Excel. Sets of instructions are highlighted with a color tint for easy reference and are typically a page or less in length.
- Detailed instructions for implementing worksheet solutions are presented in end of chapter "Excel Handbook" sections. Those who want to learn about Microsoft Excel or those who cannot or choose not to use PHStat2 can use these instructions to generate statistical results. This way, the detailed instructions are there for those who want them, but those who do not can easily skip the instructions. (All will find the Handbooks helpful for understanding how PHStat2 generates its results.)
- New or streamlined Excel instructions for a variety of methods including producing dot scale diagrams, histograms, multiple polygons, and stepwise regression.
- PHStat2, the latest version of PHStat, Prentice Hall's statistical add-in for Microsoft Excel for Windows. PHStat2 contains a number of new or enhanced procedures and now includes a full help system for easy reference.
APPLICATIONS
- Updated and improved Using Statistics business scenariosEach chapter begins with a Using Statistics example that shows how statistics can be used in one of the functional areas of businessaccounting, finance, management, marketing or information systems. This scenario is used throughout the chapter to provide an applied context for the concepts.
- Hundreds of new applied examples and exercises with data from the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and other sources have been added to the text.
- Visual ExplorationsIncluded on the CD-ROM that accompanies this textbook. Visual Explorations in Statistics is a Microsoft Excel add-in that allows students to interactively explore important statistical concepts in descriptive statistics, probability, the normal distribution, and regression analysis. For example, in descriptive statistics, students observe the effect of changes in the data on the average, median, quartiles, and standard deviation. In sampling distributions, students use simulation to explore the effect of sample size on a probability distribution. With the normal distribution, students see the effect of changes in the mean and standard deviation on the areas under the normal curve. In regression analysis, students have the opportunity of fitting a line and observing how changes in the slope and intercept affect the goodness of fit of the fitted line.
- Using Microsoft Office sections. Located at the end of selected chapters, this feature discusses ways in which users can share data between Microsoft Excel and other components of Microsoft Office, including Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint, and the web browser Internet Explorer. Detailed, step-by-step instructions explain how to incorporate an Excel worksheet or chart in a Word document or a PowerPoint presentation, as well as how to save Excel worksheets and charts as html World Wide Web pages and how to retrieve and import data from the World Wide Web using Internet Explorer.
EXERCISES
- Answers to most of the even-numbered exercises are provided at the end of the book.
- Report Writing exercises allow students to place the results of an analysis in a business context by incorporating Microsoft Office techniques such as pasting Microsoft Excel tables and charts into a Microsoft Word document and PowerPoint presentation.
- Internet Exercises, located on the book's web site, allow students to explore data sources available on the World Wide Web.
- Case Studies and Team ProjectsDetailed case studies are included at the ends of many chapters. The Springville Herald case is included at the end of most chapters as an integrating theme. A Team Project relating to mutual funds is also included at the end of most chapters as an integrating theme.
CONTENT CHANGES IN THE THIRD EDITION
- Chapter 1 ("Introduction and Data Collection") contains additional chapter review problems on accessing the Internet and a new Using Statistics example involving an Internet company.
- The Excel Primer has been reorganized and updated for Excel 2000.
- Chapter 2 ("Presenting Data in Tables and Charts") contains an updated Using Statistics example, new graphical excellence examples, a section on the scatter diagram, and a section on placing Microsoft Excel worksheet data and charts in Microsoft Word documents.
- Chapter 3 ("Descriptive Statistics") contains an updated Using Statistics example, additional integration of Excel output, coverage of the correlation coefficient, coverage of the geometric mean (which finance students especially need), a Visual Explorations module on descriptive statistics, and placing Microsoft Excel worksheet data and charts in PowerPoint presentations.
- Chapter 4 ("Basic Probability and Discrete Probability Distributions") changes the Using Statistics binomial example to an accounting information system, moves covariance so that it follows expected value, and uses an example with a negative covariance.
- Chapter 5 ("The Normal Distribution and Sampling Distributions") changes the Using Statistics example to an Internet example, uses only the cumulative normal table, integrates Excel output into the normal distribution section and contains Visual Explorations modules for the normal distribution and sampling distributions.
- Chapter 6 ("Confidence Interval Estimation") adds one-sided confidence intervals to the section on auditing and moves the finite population correction factor to the CD-ROM.
- Chapter 7 ("Fundamentals of Hypothesis Testing: One-Sample Tests") adds computer output to all sections and combines sections 7.2 and 7.3 so that p-values are not covered in a separate section.
- Chapter 8 ("Two-Sample Tests with Numerical Data") changes the Using Statistics example to one related to marketing and provides additional emphasis on p-values, adds the confidence interval estimate for the difference between two means, and discusses the t test for the difference between the means when the variances are not equal.
- Chapter 9 ("Analysis of Variance") changes the Using Statistics example, adds computer output, and provides additional emphasis on p-values.
- Chapter 10 ("Tests for Two or More Samples with Categorical Data") adds the confidence interval estimate for the difference between two proportions.
- Chapter 11 ("Simple Linear Regression") adds more coverage of PHStat, contains a Visual Explorations module on regression, and includes a section on saving Microsoft Excel worksheets and charts as web pages.
- Chapter 12 ("Multiple Regression") changes the Using Statistics example to a marketing problem, includes additional discussion of interaction terms in multiple regression, and adds new PHStat2 features to the section on stepwise regression and confidence intervals for the mean response.
- Chapter 13 ("Time-Series Analysis") changes the Using Statistics example, adds a section on index numbers that appears on the CD-ROM, and includes a section on how to retrieve and import data from the World Wide Web using Internet Explorer.
- Chapter 14 ("Decision Making") has been moved after the regression and time series forecasting chapters.
- Chapter 15 ("Statistical Applications in Quality and Productivity Management") has been moved after the regression and time series chapters and adds a section on process capability.
SUPPLEMENT PACKAGE
The supplement package that accompanies this text includes the following:
- Instructor's Solution ManualThis manual includes extra detail in the problem solutions and many Excel solutions.
- Student Solutions ManualThis manual provides detailed solutions to virtually all the even-numbered exercises.
- Test Item FileThis supplement includes extra Excel-based test questions.
- Instructor's CD/ROMThe instructor's CD-ROM contains PowerPoint slides, the Instructor's Solutions Manual and Test Item File, and Prentice Hall's Custom Test Manager.
- PHStat2This is a statistical add-in for Microsoft Excel for Windows. The data files for the examples and exercises are contained on the CDROM that accompanies the text.
- MyPHLIP Web siteThis site contains additional problems, teaching tips, tips for students, current events exercises, practice exams, and links to other sites that contain statistical data.
ABOUT THE WORLD WIDE WEB
The text has a home page on the World Wide Web.
This site incorporates the features of MyPHLIP (Prentice Hall's Learning on the Internet Partnership), a robust Web site that contains many resources for both faculty members and students. A partial list of the features includes:
- Teaching tips
- Links to other sites that provide data appropriate for statistics courses
- Student tips
- Sample Exams
- Current Event exercises
- Internet Exercises