Asked by joshua
Differentiate population from sample
Answers
Answered by
PsyDAG
A population is <I>all</I> of a particular group, while a sample is only a <I>portion</I> of that group.
I searched Google under the key words "<I>population sample</I>" to get these possible sources:
http://score.kings.k12.ca.us/lessons/wwwstats/population.html
http://www.stats.gla.ac.uk/steps/glossary/basic_definitions.html
http://www.ltcconline.net/greenl/courses/102/Statistics/population_sample_and_data.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampling_(statistics)
In the future, you can find the information you desire more quickly, if you use appropriate key words to do your own search. Also see http://hanlib.sou.edu/searchtools/.
I hope this helps. Thanks for asking.
I searched Google under the key words "<I>population sample</I>" to get these possible sources:
http://score.kings.k12.ca.us/lessons/wwwstats/population.html
http://www.stats.gla.ac.uk/steps/glossary/basic_definitions.html
http://www.ltcconline.net/greenl/courses/102/Statistics/population_sample_and_data.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampling_(statistics)
In the future, you can find the information you desire more quickly, if you use appropriate key words to do your own search. Also see http://hanlib.sou.edu/searchtools/.
I hope this helps. Thanks for asking.
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