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Mood variation is related to photoperiod in some people, and the likelihood of d

ID: 3442811 • Letter: M

Question

Mood variation is related to photoperiod in some people, and the likelihood of depression increases in the winter months. As a result, people often assume that suicide rates increase in the winter. A study in Finland divided the year 1977 into equal halves and compared the number of suicides in "winter" and "summer." Out of a total of 1636 suicides, 766 were in the winter, and 870 were in the summer. Based on these data, esteimate the proportion of suicides that occured in winter, assuming that the suicides were independent. Are the data compatible with a greater suicide rate in winter than summer, based on a 95% confidence interval?

Explanation / Answer

Note that              
              
p^ = point estimate of the population proportion = x / n =    0.468215159          
              
Also, we get the standard error of p, sp:              
              
sp = sqrt[p^ (1 - p^) / n] =    0.012336702          
              
Now, for the critical z,              
alpha/2 =   0.025          
Thus, z(alpha/2) =    2.33          
Thus,              
              
lower bound = p^ - z(alpha/2) * sp =   0.439470644          
upper bound = p^ + z(alpha/2) * sp =    0.496959674          
              
Thus, the confidence interval is              
              
(   0.439470644   ,   0.496959674   )

As this confidence interval is not totally greater than 0.50 (actually, it's totally less than 0.50!), then there is no significance evidence that there is a greater suicide rate in winter than summer.

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