Book Image

The Statistics and Calculus with Python Workshop

By : Peter Farrell, Alvaro Fuentes, Ajinkya Sudhir Kolhe, Quan Nguyen, Alexander Joseph Sarver, Marios Tsatsos
5 (1)
Book Image

The Statistics and Calculus with Python Workshop

5 (1)
By: Peter Farrell, Alvaro Fuentes, Ajinkya Sudhir Kolhe, Quan Nguyen, Alexander Joseph Sarver, Marios Tsatsos

Overview of this book

Are you looking to start developing artificial intelligence applications? Do you need a refresher on key mathematical concepts? Full of engaging practical exercises, The Statistics and Calculus with Python Workshop will show you how to apply your understanding of advanced mathematics in the context of Python. The book begins by giving you a high-level overview of the libraries you'll use while performing statistics with Python. As you progress, you'll perform various mathematical tasks using the Python programming language, such as solving algebraic functions with Python starting with basic functions, and then working through transformations and solving equations. Later chapters in the book will cover statistics and calculus concepts and how to use them to solve problems and gain useful insights. Finally, you'll study differential equations with an emphasis on numerical methods and learn about algorithms that directly calculate values of functions. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to apply essential statistics and calculus concepts to develop robust Python applications that solve business challenges.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Preface

9. Intermediate Statistics with Python

Activity 9.01: Standardized Test Performance

Solution:

  1. We are going to use the t-confidence interval function that we created earlier to calculate a 95% confidence interval. I have recreated it here for completeness:
    # We will use the T-Confidence Interval Function 
    # we wrote earlier in the Chapter
    print("For Math:")
    t_confidence_interval(list(data['Math']),0.95)
    print("For Reading:")
    t_confidence_interval(list(data['Reading']),0.95)
    print("For Science:")
    t_confidence_interval(list(data['Science']),0.95)

    The output for this code should be the following:

    For Math:
    Your 0.95 t confidence interval is (448.2561338314995,473.6869804542148)
    For Reading:
    Your 0.95 t confidence interval is (449.1937943789569,472.80078847818595)
    For Science:
    Your 0.95 t confidence interval is (453.8991748650865,476.9790108491992)

    It looks like we can say with 95% confidence that the mean score in math...