Read and reflect on the assigned readings for the week. Then post what you thought was the most important concept(s), method(s), term(s), and/or any other thing that you felt was worthy of yo
Initial Postings: Read and reflect on the assigned readings for the week. Then post what you thought was the most important concept(s), method(s), term(s), and/or any other thing that you felt was worthy of your understanding in each assigned textbook chapter.
Your initial post should be based upon the assigned reading for the week, so the textbook should be a source listed in your reference section and cited within the body of the text. Other sources are not required but feel free to use them if they aid in your discussion.
Also, provide a graduate-level response to each of the following questions:
- Chapter 2 introduces deductive and inductive reasoning. Please explain both of these methods and give real life examples.
[Your post must be substantive and demonstrate insight gained from the course material. Postings must be in the student's own words – do not provide quotes!]
[Your initial post should be at least 200+ words and in APA format (including Times New Roman with font size 12 and double spaced)
Reasoning with Data
Chapter 2
© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Learning Objectives
Define reasoning.
Execute deductive reasoning.
Explain an empirically testable conclusion.
Execute inductive reasoning.
Differentiate between deductive and inductive reasoning.
Explain how inductive reasoning can be used to evaluate an assumption.
Describe selection bias in inductive reasoning.
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
What is Reasoning?
Reasoning is the process of forming conclusions, judgments, or inferences from facts or data
Reasoning and logic are often used interchangeably
Logic is a description of the rules and/or steps behind the reasoning process
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Two Arguments
Argument 1:
The companies profits are up more than 10% over the past year. An increase in profits of 10% is the result of excellent management. You were the manager over the past year. Therefore, I conclude that you engaged in excellent management last year.
Argument 2:
Ten of your 300 employees came to me with complaints about your management. They indicated that you treated them unfairly by not giving them a raise they deserved. Therefore, I conclude that all of your employees are disgruntled with your management.
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Understanding Reasoning
In presenting the two arguments, the goal is not to make a definitive decision about which you believe (if either)
The goal is to think about and distinguish different “lines” of reasoning
In distinguishing between the different types of reasoning, you will be able to establish why you believe or question the claims made in the two arguments
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Two Major Types of Reasoning
Reasoning
Deductive Reasoning Inductive Reasoning
Both play an important role in interpreting and drawing conclusions from data analysis
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Deductive Reasoning
Deductive Reasoning
Goes from the general to the specific
Also known as top-down logic
Seeks to prove statements of the form “If A, then B”
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Deductive Reasoning
Such reasoning always implies three underlying components: assumptions (“If A”), methods of proof (“then”), and conclusions (“B”)
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Deductive Reasoning
The purest applications of deductive reasoning are in the field of mathematics
Two of the most used approaches are direct proofs and transposition
Direct proofs
Proof that begins with assumptions, explains methods of proof, and states the conclusion(s)
Transposition
Any time a group of assumptions implies a conclusion, then it is also true that any time the conclusion does not hold, at least one of the assumptions must not hold
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Direct Proof
Let’s prove the following statement by direct proof:
If X and Y are odd numbers, then their sum (X + Y) is an even number
An Example:
If X = 5(odd) and Y = 9(odd), then their sum X + Y = 14 is an even number
Failing to find a contradiction is not the same a proving a statement is generally true
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Direct Proof: A Mathematical Approach
If X and Y are odd numbers, then their sum (X + Y) is an even number
X and Y are odd numbers
If X is an odd number, then X can be written as X=2K+1, where K is an integer. (Example: X=13 X=(2 × 6)+1)
If Y is an odd number, then Y can be written as Y =2M+1, where M is an integer, (Example: Y=23 Y=(2 × 11)+1)
X+Y=(2K+1)+(2M+1)=2K+2M+2=2(K+M+1)
K+M+1 is an integer so X+Y is 2 times an integer
Any number that is 2 times an integer is divisible by 2
This means X+Y is even
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Direct Proof: Common Sense Approach
“If McDonald’s offers breakfast all day, their revenues will increase.”
McDonald’s stores offer breakfast all day.
The addition of breakfast during lunch/dinner hours implies more choices.
Customers already choosing McDonald’s during lunch/dinner hours can continue buying the same meals at McDonald’s.
Customers not choosing McDonald’s during lunch/dinner hours may start eating at McDonald’s.
Retaining current customers and adding new ones, McDonald’s revenues will increase overall.
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Transposition
While direct proofs are sufficient to prove a point logically, an alternative approach, transposition, may be more effective
Transposition
Is the equivalence between the statements “If A, then B” and “If not B, then A”
Any time a group of assumptions implies a conclusion, then it is also true that any time the conclusion does not hold, then at least one of the assumptions must not hold
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Transposition
“If A, then B” AND “If not B, then not A”
ASSUMPTIONS
(A)
CONCLUSIONS
(B)
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Transposition: A Mathematical Approach
Prove the statement: If X2 is even, then X is even
Suppose X is not an even number; it is instead an odd number
If X is an odd number, then X= (2K +1), where K is an integer
X2 = (2K+1)2 = 4K2 + 4K+1.
4K2 + 4K = 4(K2 +K) and so is divisible by 2
4K2 + 4K is an even number
X2 = 4(K2 +K)+1 is an even number plus 1, meaning it is an odd number
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© 2019 McGraw-Hill Education.
Transposition
The statement was: If X2 is even, then X is even
Using transposition, the opposite of the conclusion is used to proof the opposite of the assumption: If X is odd, then X2 is even would be incorrect
Transposition can also be used without using mathematics to prove statements like “If A, then B”.
Transposition can be particularly effective if an assumption seems indisputably obvious.
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Transposition: An Example
Proof the statement: “If McDonald’s stores offer breakfast all day, revenue will increase”
McDonald’s stores revenues will not increase
This means total revenues from current and new customers will not increase
This means either there will be no new customers or revenues from current customers will decrease
This means there could not have been an expansion in the menu
McDonald’s stores do not offer breakfast all day
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Direct Proof and Transposition
Direct Proof
State assumptions
Explain methods of proof (mathematics, common sense, etc.)
State conclusions
Transposition
Assume the opposite of the conclusion
Explain methods of proof (mathematics, common sense, etc.)
State assumption(s) that is (are) violated (not A)
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Deductive Reasoning
Used commonly in the application of law
If there is disagreement with a conclusion there are two possible sources:
The method of proof, OR
The assumption
There are two ways of resolving disputes about assumptions
Show robustness- the persistent accuracy of a conclusion despite variation in the associated assumption(s) within the context of a deductive argument
Assess consistency with a collected dataset
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Empirically Testable Conclusions
An empirically testable conclusion is a conclusion whose validity can be meaningfully tested using observable data.
Example:
A banana company’s management staffs are divided into two groups about their product’s placement in a major grocery store chain.
Group 1 believes that change in current location will increase its sales.
Group 2 believes that current location is good enough.
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Empirically Testable Conclusions
Company has the sales data in the current location.
Company chooses to move its product to a new location and collects sales data.
Now the company can meaningfully test the validity of the management’s competing conclusions.
Making the actual decision about the validity of an empirically testable conclusion based on observable data is an application of inductive reasoning
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Inductive Reasoning
Inductive reasoning
Reasoning that goes from the specific to the general; bottom-up logic
Population
The entire set of potential observations about which we want to learn
Data sample
A subset of population that is collected and observed
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Inductive Reasoning
Business regularly collect data samples to draw conclusions about the population after applying inductive reasoning.
The conclusion from inductive reasoning requires degree of support (also called inductive probability).
Degree of support is also called the strength of the inductive argument.
Example: if we are 50% confident about the conclusion, then the degree of support is 50%.
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Degrees of Support
Two Types of Degrees of Support
Both play an important role in interpreting and drawing conclusions from data analysis
SUBJECTIVE DEGREE OF SUPPORT
(IT IS BASED ON OPINION AND LACKING STATISTICAL FOUNDATION)
OBJECTIVE DEGREE OF SUPPORT
(IT HAS A STATISTICAL FOUNDATION AND THUS MORE CREDIBLE THAN SUBJECTIVE DEGREE OF SUPPORT)
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Evaluating Assumptions
Through deductive reasoning, an empirically testable conclusion is made
Collect a data sample
Test the conclusion by comparing the observed outcomes in the data samples to their corresponding probabilities
Use inductive reasoning to decide whether the conclusion passes or fails
If it fails, transposition implies we must reject
If it passes, then we must not reject
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Inductive Reasoning for Evaluating Assumptions
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Selection Bias in Inductive Reasoning
Improper use of inductive reasoning may lead to inaccurate, or biased conclusions
Data-generating process is typically the source of the bias
Survey questions constructed in a leading way
Confirmation bias is the tendency to confirm a claim
Predictable patterns are discovered
Predictable-world bias is the tendency to find order when none exists, and occurs when people “read too much” into perceived patterns from random data
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Selection Bias
Selection bias
The act of drawing conclusions about a population using a selected data sample, without accounting for the means of selection
There are two common types:
Collector selection bias occurs when the collector selects the members of the data sample in a systematic way
Availability bias occurs when the collector of the data sample selects the members of the data sample according to what is most readily available
Member selection bias occurs when potential members of the data sample self-select into, or out of, the sample
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