Code for Quiz 13.
Load the R packages we will use.
Replace all the instances of ???. These are answers on your moodle quiz. Run all the individual code chunks to make sure the answers in this file correspond with your quiz answers After you check all your code chunks run then you can knit it. It won’t knit until the ??? are replaced Save a plot to be your preview plot
#Question 1
Make sure you have installed and loaded the tidyverse, infer, and skimr packages
Fill in the blanks
Put the command you use in the Rchunks in your Rmd file for this quiz.
The data this quiz is a subset of HR
Look at the variable definitions Note that the variables evaluation and salary have been recoded to be represented as words instead of numbers Set random seed generator to 123
set.seed(123)
hr_2_tidy.csv is the name of your data subset
Read it into and assign to hr
Note: col_types = “fddfff” defines the column types factor-double-double-factor-factor-factor
hr <- read_csv("https://estanny.com/static/week13/data/hr_2_tidy.csv",
col_types = "fddfff")
use the skim to summarize the data in hr
skim(hr)
Name | hr |
Number of rows | 500 |
Number of columns | 6 |
_______________________ | |
Column type frequency: | |
factor | 4 |
numeric | 2 |
________________________ | |
Group variables | None |
Variable type: factor
skim_variable | n_missing | complete_rate | ordered | n_unique | top_counts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gender | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 2 | mal: 256, fem: 244 |
evaluation | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | bad: 154, fai: 142, goo: 108, ver: 96 |
salary | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 95, lev: 94, lev: 87, lev: 85 |
status | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 3 | fir: 194, pro: 179, ok: 127 |
Variable type: numeric
skim_variable | n_missing | complete_rate | mean | sd | p0 | p25 | p50 | p75 | p100 | hist |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
age | 0 | 1 | 39.86 | 11.55 | 20.3 | 29.60 | 40.2 | 50.1 | 59.9 | ▇▇▇▇▇ |
hours | 0 | 1 | 49.39 | 13.15 | 35.0 | 37.48 | 45.6 | 58.9 | 79.9 | ▇▃▂▂▂ |
The mean hours worked per week is: 49.39
specify that hours is the variable of interest
Response: hours (numeric)
# A tibble: 500 × 1
hours
<dbl>
1 78.1
2 35.1
3 36.9
4 38.5
5 36.1
6 78.1
7 76
8 35.6
9 35.6
10 56.8
# … with 490 more rows
#hypothesize that the average hours worked is 48
hr %>%
specify(response = hours) %>%
hypothesize(null = "point", mu = 48)
Response: hours (numeric)
Null Hypothesis: point
# A tibble: 500 × 1
hours
<dbl>
1 78.1
2 35.1
3 36.9
4 38.5
5 36.1
6 78.1
7 76
8 35.6
9 35.6
10 56.8
# … with 490 more rows
#generate 1000 replicates representing the null hypothesis
hr %>%
specify(response = hours) %>%
hypothesize(null = "point", mu = 48) %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "bootstrap")
Response: hours (numeric)
Null Hypothesis: point
# A tibble: 500,000 × 2
# Groups: replicate [1,000]
replicate hours
<int> <dbl>
1 1 39.7
2 1 44.3
3 1 46.8
4 1 33.7
5 1 39.6
6 1 39.5
7 1 40.5
8 1 55.8
9 1 72.6
10 1 35.7
# … with 499,990 more rows
The output has 500,000 rows
#Calculate the distribution of statistics from the generated data
Assign the output null_t_distribution
Display null_t_distribution
null_t_distribution <- hr %>%
specify(response = hours) %>%
hypothesize(null = "point", mu = 48) %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "bootstrap") %>%
calculate(stat = "t")
null_t_distribution
Response: hours (numeric)
Null Hypothesis: point
# A tibble: 1,000 × 2
replicate stat
<int> <dbl>
1 1 0.891
2 2 -0.526
3 3 -0.386
4 4 -0.893
5 5 0.491
6 6 -0.483
7 7 2.08
8 8 -1.23
9 9 -0.424
10 10 -1.21
# … with 990 more rows
null_t_distribution has 1000 t-stats
#visualize the simulated null distribution
visualize(null_t_distribution)
#Calculate the statistic from your observed data
Assign the output observed_t_statistic
Display observed_t_statistic
observed_t_statistic <- hr %>%
specify(response = hours) %>%
hypothesize(null = "point", mu = 48) %>%
calculate(stat = "t")
observed_t_statistic
Response: hours (numeric)
Null Hypothesis: point
# A tibble: 1 × 1
stat
<dbl>
1 2.37
#get_p_value from the simulated null distribution and the observed statistic
null_t_distribution %>%
get_p_value(obs_stat = observed_t_statistic, direction = "two-sided")
# A tibble: 1 × 1
p_value
<dbl>
1 0.014
#shade_p_value on the simulated null distribution
null_t_distribution %>%
visualize() +
shade_p_value(obs_stat = observed_t_statistic, direction = "two-sided")
Is the p-value < 0.05? yes
Does your analysis support the null hypothesis that the true mean number of hours worked was 48? no
#Question 2
Make sure you have installed and loaded the tidyverse, infer, and skimr packages
Fill in the blanks
Put the command you use in the Rchunks in your Rmd file for this quiz.
The data this quiz is a subset of HR
Look at the variable definitions Note that the variables evaluation and salary have been recoded to be represented as words instead of numbers hr_3_tidy.csv is the name of your data subset
Read it into and assign to hr_2
Note: col_types = “fddfff” defines the column types factor-double-double-factor-factor-factor
hr_2 <- read_csv("https://estanny.com/static/week13/data/hr_3_tidy.csv",
col_types = "fddfff")
#Q: Is the average number of hours worked the same for both genders in hr_2? use skim to summarize the data in hr_2 by gender
Name | Piped data |
Number of rows | 500 |
Number of columns | 6 |
_______________________ | |
Column type frequency: | |
factor | 3 |
numeric | 2 |
________________________ | |
Group variables | gender |
Variable type: factor
skim_variable | gender | n_missing | complete_rate | ordered | n_unique | top_counts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
evaluation | male | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | bad: 72, fai: 67, goo: 61, ver: 47 |
evaluation | female | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | bad: 76, fai: 71, goo: 61, ver: 45 |
salary | male | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 47, lev: 43, lev: 43, lev: 42 |
salary | female | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 51, lev: 46, lev: 45, lev: 43 |
status | male | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 3 | fir: 98, pro: 81, ok: 68 |
status | female | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 3 | fir: 98, pro: 91, ok: 64 |
Variable type: numeric
skim_variable | gender | n_missing | complete_rate | mean | sd | p0 | p25 | p50 | p75 | p100 | hist |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
age | male | 0 | 1 | 38.23 | 10.86 | 20 | 28.9 | 37.9 | 47.05 | 59.9 | ▇▇▇▇▅ |
age | female | 0 | 1 | 40.56 | 11.67 | 20 | 31.0 | 40.3 | 50.50 | 59.8 | ▆▆▇▆▇ |
hours | male | 0 | 1 | 49.55 | 13.11 | 35 | 38.4 | 45.4 | 57.65 | 79.9 | ▇▃▂▂▂ |
hours | female | 0 | 1 | 49.80 | 13.38 | 35 | 38.2 | 45.6 | 59.40 | 79.8 | ▇▂▃▂▂ |
Females worked an average of 49.49 hours per week Males worked an average of 49.3 hours per week
#Use geom_boxplot to plot distributions of hours worked by gender
hr_2 %>%
ggplot(aes(x = gender, y = hours)) +
geom_boxplot()
#specify the variables of interest are hours and gender
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: gender (factor)
# A tibble: 500 × 2
hours gender
<dbl> <fct>
1 49.6 male
2 39.2 female
3 63.2 female
4 42.2 male
5 54.7 male
6 54.3 female
7 37.3 female
8 45.6 female
9 35.1 female
10 53 male
# … with 490 more rows
#hypothesize that the number of hours worked and gender are independent
hr_2 %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = gender) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence")
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: gender (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 500 × 2
hours gender
<dbl> <fct>
1 49.6 male
2 39.2 female
3 63.2 female
4 42.2 male
5 54.7 male
6 54.3 female
7 37.3 female
8 45.6 female
9 35.1 female
10 53 male
# … with 490 more rows
#generate 1000 replicates representing the null hypothesis
hr_2 %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = gender) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence") %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "permute")
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: gender (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 500,000 × 3
# Groups: replicate [1,000]
hours gender replicate
<dbl> <fct> <int>
1 55.7 male 1
2 35.5 female 1
3 35.1 female 1
4 44.2 male 1
5 52.8 male 1
6 46 female 1
7 41.2 female 1
8 52.9 female 1
9 35.6 female 1
10 35 male 1
# … with 499,990 more rows
The output had 500,000 rows
#calculate the distribution of statistics from the generated data
Assign the output null_distribution_2_sample_permute Display null_distribution_2_sample_permute
null_distribution_2_sample_permute <- hr_2 %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = gender) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence") %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "permute") %>%
calculate(stat = "t", order = c("female", "male"))
null_distribution_2_sample_permute
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: gender (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 1,000 × 2
replicate stat
<int> <dbl>
1 1 -1.81
2 2 -1.29
3 3 0.0525
4 4 -0.793
5 5 0.826
6 6 0.429
7 7 0.0843
8 8 -0.264
9 9 2.42
10 10 0.603
# … with 990 more rows
null_t_distribution has 1000 t-stats
#visualize the simulated null distribution
visualize(null_distribution_2_sample_permute)
#calculate the statistic from your observed data
Assign the output observed_t_2_sample_stat
Display observed_t_2_sample_stat
observed_t_2_sample_stat <- hr_2 %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = gender) %>%
calculate(stat = "t", order = c("female", "male"))
observed_t_2_sample_stat
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: gender (factor)
# A tibble: 1 × 1
stat
<dbl>
1 0.208
#get_p_value from the simulated null distribution and the observed statistic
null_t_distribution %>%
get_p_value(obs_stat = observed_t_2_sample_stat, direction = "two-sided")
# A tibble: 1 × 1
p_value
<dbl>
1 0.822
#shade_p_value on the simulated null distribution
null_t_distribution %>%
visualize() +
shade_p_value(obs_stat = observed_t_2_sample_stat, direction = "two-sided")
Is the p-value < 0.05? no
Does your analysis support the null hypothesis that the true mean number of hours worked by female and male employees was the same? yes
#Question 3
Make sure you have installed and loaded the tidyverse, infer, and skimr packages
Fill in the blanks
Put the command you use in the Rchunks in your Rmd file for this quiz.
The data this quiz is a subset of HR
Look at the variable definitions Note that the variables evaluation and salary have been recoded to be represented as words instead of numbers hr_3_tidy.csv is the name of your data subset
Read it into and assign to hr_anova
Note: col_types = “fddfff” defines the column types factor-double-double-factor-factor-factor
hr_anova <- read_csv("https://estanny.com/static/week13/data/hr_3_tidy.csv",
col_types = "fddfff")
#Q: Is the average number of hours worked the same for all three status (fired, ok and promoted) ?
use skim to summarize the data in hr_anova by status
Name | Piped data |
Number of rows | 500 |
Number of columns | 6 |
_______________________ | |
Column type frequency: | |
factor | 3 |
numeric | 2 |
________________________ | |
Group variables | status |
Variable type: factor
skim_variable | status | n_missing | complete_rate | ordered | n_unique | top_counts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gender | promoted | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 2 | fem: 91, mal: 81 |
gender | fired | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 2 | mal: 98, fem: 98 |
gender | ok | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 2 | mal: 68, fem: 64 |
evaluation | promoted | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | goo: 79, ver: 52, fai: 21, bad: 20 |
evaluation | fired | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | bad: 77, fai: 64, ver: 30, goo: 25 |
evaluation | ok | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 4 | fai: 53, bad: 51, goo: 18, ver: 10 |
salary | promoted | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 42, lev: 37, lev: 36, lev: 28 |
salary | fired | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 59, lev: 40, lev: 39, lev: 25 |
salary | ok | 0 | 1 | FALSE | 6 | lev: 33, lev: 29, lev: 28, lev: 23 |
Variable type: numeric
skim_variable | status | n_missing | complete_rate | mean | sd | p0 | p25 | p50 | p75 | p100 | hist |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
age | promoted | 0 | 1 | 40.22 | 11.11 | 20.1 | 31.67 | 41.00 | 48.82 | 59.7 | ▆▇▇▇▇ |
age | fired | 0 | 1 | 38.95 | 11.23 | 20.0 | 29.82 | 38.80 | 48.75 | 59.9 | ▇▆▇▇▅ |
age | ok | 0 | 1 | 39.03 | 11.77 | 20.0 | 28.28 | 38.75 | 49.92 | 59.7 | ▇▇▆▇▆ |
hours | promoted | 0 | 1 | 59.29 | 12.53 | 35.0 | 49.90 | 58.65 | 70.35 | 79.9 | ▅▆▇▆▇ |
hours | fired | 0 | 1 | 42.37 | 9.15 | 35.0 | 36.20 | 39.20 | 43.80 | 79.6 | ▇▁▁▁▁ |
hours | ok | 0 | 1 | 47.99 | 11.55 | 35.0 | 37.45 | 45.75 | 55.23 | 75.7 | ▇▃▃▂▂ |
Employees that were fired worked an average of 41.67 hours per week Employees that were ok worked an average of 48.05 hours per week Employees that were promoted worked an average of 59.27 hours per week
#Use geom_boxplot to plot distributions of hours worked by status
hr_anova %>%
ggplot(aes(x = status, y = hours)) +
geom_boxplot()
#specify the variables of interest are hours and status
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: status (factor)
# A tibble: 500 × 2
hours status
<dbl> <fct>
1 49.6 promoted
2 39.2 fired
3 63.2 promoted
4 42.2 promoted
5 54.7 promoted
6 54.3 fired
7 37.3 fired
8 45.6 promoted
9 35.1 fired
10 53 promoted
# … with 490 more rows
#hypothesize that the number of hours worked and status are independent
hr_anova %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = status) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence")
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: status (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 500 × 2
hours status
<dbl> <fct>
1 49.6 promoted
2 39.2 fired
3 63.2 promoted
4 42.2 promoted
5 54.7 promoted
6 54.3 fired
7 37.3 fired
8 45.6 promoted
9 35.1 fired
10 53 promoted
# … with 490 more rows
generate 1000 replicates representing the null hypothesis
hr_anova %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = status) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence") %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "permute")
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: status (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 500,000 × 3
# Groups: replicate [1,000]
hours status replicate
<dbl> <fct> <int>
1 38.4 promoted 1
2 41 fired 1
3 66.1 promoted 1
4 46.1 promoted 1
5 65.1 promoted 1
6 43.7 fired 1
7 35.1 fired 1
8 40.9 promoted 1
9 38.4 fired 1
10 67.7 promoted 1
# … with 499,990 more rows
The output has 500,000 rows
#calculate the distribution of statistics from the generated data
Assign the output null_distribution_anova
Display null_distribution_anova
null_distribution_anova <- hr_anova %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = status) %>%
hypothesize(null = "independence") %>%
generate(reps = 1000, type = "permute") %>%
calculate(stat = "F")
null_distribution_anova
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: status (factor)
Null Hypothesis: independence
# A tibble: 1,000 × 2
replicate stat
<int> <dbl>
1 1 0.204
2 2 0.972
3 3 2.16
4 4 1.33
5 5 0.919
6 6 1.14
7 7 1.52
8 8 0.335
9 9 0.500
10 10 0.0298
# … with 990 more rows
null_distribution_anova has 1000 F-stats
#visualize the simulated null distribution
visualize(null_distribution_anova)
#calculate the statistic from your observed data
Assign the output observed_f_sample_stat
Display observed_f_sample_stat
observed_f_sample_stat <- hr_anova %>%
specify(response = hours, explanatory = status) %>%
calculate(stat = "F")
observed_f_sample_stat
Response: hours (numeric)
Explanatory: status (factor)
# A tibble: 1 × 1
stat
<dbl>
1 110.
#get_p_value from the simulated null distribution and the observed statistic
null_distribution_anova %>%
get_p_value(obs_stat = observed_f_sample_stat, direction = "greater")
# A tibble: 1 × 1
p_value
<dbl>
1 0
#shade_p_value on the simulated null distribution
null_t_distribution %>%
visualize() +
shade_p_value(obs_stat = observed_f_sample_stat, direction = "greater")
Save the previous plot to preview.png and add to the yaml chunk at the top
If the p-value < 0.05? yes
Does your analysis support the null hypothesis that the true means of the number of hours worked for those that were “fired”, “ok” and “promoted” were the same? no