In this section you create a histogram of the latitude
variable and examine relationships between the category
and latitude
variables. The figures in this section assume that you have excluded observations with low wind speeds as described in the
section Exclude Observations.
To create a histogram:
Select
→ from the main menu.The Histogram dialog box appears. (See Figure 2.7.)
Select the variable latitude
, and click .
Figure 2.7: Histogram Dialog Box
Click
.A histogram (Figure 2.8) appears, which shows the distribution of the latitude
variable for the storms that are included in the plots. Move the histogram so that it does not cover the bar chart or data
table.
Figure 2.8: Histogram of Latitudes of Storms
You have seen that you can select observations in a plot by clicking bars or observation markers. You can also select observations by drawing a selection rectangle. To draw a selection rectangle, click in a graph and hold down the left mouse button while you move the mouse pointer to a new location.
Draw a selection rectangle in the bar chart to select all storms of category 3, 4, and 5.
The bar chart looks like the one in Figure 2.9.
Figure 2.9: Selecting the Most Intense Storms
Note that these selected observations are also shown in the histogram in Figure 2.10. The histogram shows the conditional distribution of latitude
, given that a storm is greater than or equal to category 3 intensity. The conditional distribution shows that very strong
hurricanes tend to occur between 11 and 37 degrees north latitude, with a median latitude of about 22 degrees. If these data
are representative of all Atlantic hurricanes, you might conjecture that it would be relatively rare for a category 3 hurricane
to strike north of the North Carolina-Virginia border (roughly north latitude).
Figure 2.10: Latitudes of Intense Storms