BIOS601 AGENDA: Tuesday September 02, 2014
[updated August 27, 2014]
 Agenda for Tuesday Sept 02, 2014 
  
  -   Discussion of computing and statistical inference issues
  in the 
  assignment on sampling of locations on Earth's surface
 
 answers to be handed in for Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4, Q5
 
 The first (general) computing issue is (if need be) to get up to speed 
  in the use of R. See the R links on the main course page. 
  If you run into problems, let JH know asap.
 
 A statistical/computing issue might be how to come up
  with  a way to
  randomly sample locations on the surface of a sphere, using
  latitude and longitude co-ordinates. See the notes at the bottom of the 
  file containing the
  2 R functions inside the Oceanography
  link (on the height of the land and the depth of the ocean) inside the resources for surveys. JH thinks of the problem
  by visualizing the segments of a peeled orange!
 
 Remarks:
  The statistical  issues raised by this assignment include the  
  distinction between standard deviation and 
  standard error; the concept of a margin of error; 
  when it is appropriate to use the Normal (Gaussian) approximation to the binomial distribution;
  the (often under-appreciated) centrality of the 
  Central Limit Theorem (CLT) in
  applied statistical work, not just for the sampling distribution of a 
  sample proportion, but also for that of a 
  sample mean.