BSTA 17A01 - Statistics applied to Social Sciences - Introductory Level

Programme: A statistics course composed of 12 discussion sections. Synopsis: Focusing on the practice of empirical research in the social sciences, this course is intended to provide the foundations in descriptive and inferential statistics.
Chung Shue CHEN,Nathan BONIN,Nhat Minh TRAN,Jules-Rémy SARANT,Myriam MAUMY,Gabriela PILAY
Séminaire
English
Students who have completed a Bac-L course (or its equivalent). The grade average in mathematics from the first semester will provide a basis upon which to arbitrate claims for exemption.
Spring 2023-2024
Continuous assessment accounts for ⅔ of the overall grade, while the final examination contributes a further ⅓.
Session 1: Introduction to empirical research in the social sciences - Statistics as a tool for answering empirical research questions in the social sciences: examples of research questions - Basic concepts: statistical individuals, population, sample, variables, modality, size, frequency, statistical distribution - Types of variables: nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio variables Session 2: Single-variable statistical series - Measures of position (median, mean, quartiles) - Measures of dispersion (variance, standard deviation, range, inter-quartile deviation) Sessions 3 and 4: Discrete random variables - Definition - The law of probability - Distribution function - Graphical techniques (histograms, pie charts etc.) Sessions 5 and 6: Continuous random variables - Definition - The notion of density - Distribution function - Graphical representations and interpretations Session 7: Normal distribution - Normal distribution (general / reduced centred): equations, graphs, interpretations and reading of a Z-table (for calculating probabilities of the form P(a < X < b)) - Sessions 8 and 9: Fluctuation and confidence intervals - Definitions - 95% intervals (and more generally at (1-a)%) - In the general case, and for a proportion (where the variance is p (1-p)) Session 10: Two variable statistical series - Bivariate analysis and variable types - Two-way tables (crosstabs): single, marginal and conditional frequencies - Covariance and correlation Session 11: Logistic regression - Scatter plots - Logistic regression affined using ordinary least squares (OLS) - The R² coefficient of determination - Reading and interpretation of an econometric input-output table (estimators, standard errors, different specification models) Session 12: Final examination
Novi, M., Pourcentages et tableaux statistiques, Paris, PUF