Nov 21, 2024  
2023-2024 Undergraduate Academic Catalog-June Update 
    
2023-2024 Undergraduate Academic Catalog-June Update [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)

MTH 2450 - Business Statistics and Analytics

4 lecture hours 0 lab hours 4 credits
Course Description
Managerial decisions frequently involve some level of uncertainty. This course is designed to acquaint students with probabilistic and statistical methods that can be used in decision-making. Topics include probability, random variables, probability distributions, tests of hypotheses, experimental designs, analysis of variance, linear regressions, and nonparametric statistics.  Note: students may receive credit for only one of MTH 2430 , MTH 2450, and MTH 2480 .This course is not available to students with credit for MTH 2410  or IND 2030 . This course meets the following Raider Core CLO requirement: Think Critically. (prereq: MTH 1050  or MTH 1080  or placement into MTH 2450) (quarter system prereq: MA 120 or placement into MTH 2450)
Course Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
  • Formulate events from statements in various applications
  • Apply Venn diagrams to identify sets or compute probability of events
  • Evaluate conditional probability and implement multiplication rule
  • Apply Bayes’ theorem
  • Evaluate measures of central tendency and dispersion of a set of observations
  • Recognize and utilize binomial and normal distributions
  • Discern joint distributions of random variables
  • Differentiate dependent random variables from independent random variables
  • Evaluate Pearson and Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients
  • Visualize and identify outliers or any anomaly in data
  • Provide point estimation for sample mean and sample variance, and interval estimation for population mean and population proportion
  • Distinguish type I and type II errors and provide examples
  • Perform hypothesis tests about one population mean, population proportion, and population variance
  • Perform hypothesis tests about difference of two population means, population proportions, and population variances
  • Perform one-way and two-way ANOVA
  • Conduct multiple comparison tests
  • Distinguish between linear relationship, nonlinear relationship, and no relationship for a sample of observations
  • Compute and interpret sample correlation coefficient
  • Construct simple linear regression and multiple linear regression from sample points
  • Validate the fit of regressions and identify multicollinearity
  • Perform Pearson’s chi-square test for goodness of fit, chi-square test for independence, Mann-Whitney test, and Kruskal-Wallis test for equivalence of populations
  • Interpret reported statistics
  • Analyze results from their own experiments

Prerequisites by Topic
  • Evaluation of algebraic formulas

Course Topics
  • Multiplication rules and Bayes’ theorem
  • Independence of events
  • Discrete random variables and continuous random variables
  • Probability distributions
  • Measures of central tendency and dispersion
  • One-sample hypothesis testing and statistical inference
  • Two-sample hypothesis testing and statistical inference
  • Analysis of variance
  • Linear regressions
  • Nonparametric statistics

Coordinator
Dr. Yu-Sin Chang



Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)