Statistics in Criminology and Criminal Justice: Analysis and InterpretationJones & Bartlett Learning, 2005 - 423 lappuses Thoroughly updated and revised, this edition provides criminal justice students with a firm knowledge base in the theory and application of statistical analyses. Students will be introduced to methods of identifying and classifying data, followed by explanations and demonstrations of statistical procedures. They will learn what statistical techniques are appropriate for particular data, why procedures give the results they do, and how to interpret the output of statistical analyses. The book features updated statistical output, clear explanations of how to perform the analyses being discussed, revised data files, additional data sets to increase students' ability to conduct research on their own, and extensive use of flowcharts and examples to maximize students' comprehension of the topic. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 90.
. lappuse
... Distributions , and Graphical Representation Frequency Distributions : A Chart of a Different Color 51 Conventions for Building Distributions 51 Frequency Distributions 54 Percentage Distributions 56 Pie Charts 58 Histograms and Bar ...
... Distributions , and Graphical Representation Frequency Distributions : A Chart of a Different Color 51 Conventions for Building Distributions 51 Frequency Distributions 54 Percentage Distributions 56 Pie Charts 58 Histograms and Bar ...
. lappuse
... Distribution Moments of a Distribution 129 Number of Modes 130 Skewness 130 Analysis of Skew 131 Kurtosis 133 Analysis of Kurtosis 134 The Importance of Skew and Kurtosis Design of the Normal Curve 134 134 Points to Remember About the ...
... Distribution Moments of a Distribution 129 Number of Modes 130 Skewness 130 Analysis of Skew 131 Kurtosis 133 Analysis of Kurtosis 134 The Importance of Skew and Kurtosis Design of the Normal Curve 134 134 Points to Remember About the ...
. lappuse
... Distribution for Nominal and Ordinal Level Data 253 Establishing the Nature of the Distribution for Interval and Ratio Level Data 256 Conclusions 257 Chapter Resources 258 11 Introduction to Multivariate Statistics When Two Variables ...
... Distribution for Nominal and Ordinal Level Data 253 Establishing the Nature of the Distribution for Interval and Ratio Level Data 256 Conclusions 257 Chapter Resources 258 11 Introduction to Multivariate Statistics When Two Variables ...
51. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
52. lappuse
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Atvainojiet, šīs lappuses saturs ir ierobežots..
Saturs
Measures of Central Tendency | 83 |
Measures of Dispersion | 107 |
The Form of a Distribution | 129 |
Introduction to Bivariate Descriptive Statistics | 149 |
Measures of Existence and Statistical Significance | 167 |
Tobit Regression | 319 |
Known Probability of Error | 364 |
Chisquare Test for Independence | 377 |
Analysis of Variance ANOVA | 383 |
392 | |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
ANOVA assuming the null assumption calculated cell central tendency Chapter Resources chart Chi-square coefficient column Correlation criminal justice critical value crosstab data set deadly force degrees of freedom delinquents dependent variable determine dichotomous difference discussed in Chapter examine example Expected Count Figure formula Frequency Percent Gamma graphs groups hypothesis testing important independent inferential analyses interpretation interval level data juvenile Kurtosis Lambda level of measurement logistic regression logit mean measure of central measures of association median mode multicollinearity multivariate nominal level nominal level data normal curve null hypothesis OLS regression one-tailed ordinal level data Pearson's percentage police perform predicting probability problem ratio level data Recoded VICTIM reject the null relationship respondent sampling distribution scores Select skewed Spearman's Rho SPSS square standard deviation standard error statistical analysis statistical procedures statistically significant step t-test theory tion Total Type II error univariate Valid variance Z score