z =

25
_ z = X - X - Wow! We can use the z-distribution to test a hypothesis.

description

X - . _. z = . -.  X. Wow! We can use the z-distribution to test a hypothesis. Step 1. State the statistical hypothesis H 0 to be tested (e.g., H 0 :  = 100) Step 2. Specify the degree of risk of a type-I error, that is, the risk of incorrectly concluding - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of z =

Page 1: z  =

_

z = X -

X-

Wow! We can use the z-distribution to test a hypothesis.

Page 2: z  =

Step 1. State the statistical hypothesis H0 to be tested (e.g., H0: = 100)

Step 2. Specify the degree of risk of a type-I error, that is, the risk of incorrectly concluding that H0 is false when it is true. This risk, stated as a probability, is denoted by , the probabilityof a Type I error.

Step 3. Assuming H0 to be correct, find the probability of obtaining a sample mean thatdiffers from by an amount as large or larger than what was observed.

Step 4. Make a decision regarding H0, whether to reject or not to reject it.

Page 3: z  =

Step 1. What would it look like if this is random?

Step 2. Specify the degree of risk of a type-I error, that is, the risk of incorrectly concluding that H0 is false when it is true. This risk, stated as a probability, is denoted by , the probabilityof a Type I error.

Step 3. Assuming H0 to be correct, find the probability of obtaining a sample mean thatdiffers from by an amount as large or larger than what was observed.

Step 4. Make a decision regarding H0, whether to reject or not to reject it.

Page 4: z  =

Step 1. What would it look like if this is random?

Step 2. If the reality is that it is indeed random, what risk can I live with to wrongly conclude that it’s not random?

Step 3. Assuming H0 to be correct, find the probability of obtaining a sample mean thatdiffers from by an amount as large or larger than what was observed.

Step 4. Make a decision regarding H0, whether to reject or not to reject it.

Page 5: z  =

Step 1. What would it look like if this is random?

Step 2. If the reality is that it is indeed random, what risk can I live with to wrongly conclude that it’s not random?

Step 3. What’s the exact value beyond which I can conclude, under that condition of risk, that it’s not random?

Step 4. Make a decision regarding H0, whether to reject or not to reject it.

Page 6: z  =

Step 1. What would it look like if this is random?

Step 2. If the reality is that it is indeed random, what risk can I live with to wrongly conclude that it’s not random?

Step 3. What’s the exact value beyond which I can conclude, under that condition of risk, that it’s not random?

Step 4. Make a decision regarding whether it’s not random (reject), or random (accept).

Page 7: z  =

An Example

You draw a sample of 25 adopted children. You are interested in whether theyare different from the general population on an IQ test ( = 100, = 15).

The mean from your sample is 108. What is the null hypothesis?

Page 8: z  =

An Example

You draw a sample of 25 adopted children. You are interested in whether theyare different from the general population on an IQ test ( = 100, = 15).

The mean from your sample is 108. What is the null hypothesis?

H0: = 100

Page 9: z  =

An Example

You draw a sample of 25 adopted children. You are interested in whether theyare different from the general population on an IQ test ( = 100, = 15).

The mean from your sample is 108. What is the null hypothesis?

H0: = 100

Test this hypothesis at = .05

Page 10: z  =

An Example

You draw a sample of 25 adopted children. You are interested in whether theyare different from the general population on an IQ test ( = 100, = 15).

The mean from your sample is 108. What is the null hypothesis?

H0: = 100

Test this hypothesis at = .05

Step 3. Assuming H0 to be correct, find the sample mean value thatdiffers from by an amount as large or larger than what might be observed by chance.

Step 4. Make a decision regarding H0, whether to reject or not to reject it.

Page 11: z  =
Page 12: z  =
Page 13: z  =

GOSSET, William Sealy 1876-1937

Page 14: z  =

GOSSET, William Sealy 1876-1937

Page 15: z  =

The t-distribution is a family of distributions varying by degrees of freedom (d.f., whered.f.=n-1). At d.f. = , but at smaller than that, the tails are fatter.

Page 16: z  =

_

z = X -

X-

_

t = X -

sX-

sX = s

N

-

Page 17: z  =

The t-distribution is a family of distributions varying by degrees of freedom (d.f., whered.f.=n-1). At d.f. = , but at smaller than that, the tails are fatter.

Page 18: z  =

df = N - 1

Degrees of Freedom

Page 19: z  =
Page 20: z  =

Problem

Sample:

Mean = 54.2SD = 2.4N = 16

Do you think that this sample could have been drawn from a population with = 50?

Page 21: z  =

Problem

Sample:

Mean = 54.2SD = 2.4N = 16

Do you think that this sample could have been drawn from a population with = 50?

_

t = X -

sX-

Page 22: z  =

The mean for the sample of 54.2 (sd = 2.4) was significantly different from a hypothesized population mean of 50, t(15) = 7.0, p < .001.

Page 23: z  =

The mean for the sample of 54.2 (sd = 2.4) was significantly reliably different from a hypothesized population mean of 50, t(15) = 7.0, p < .001.

Page 24: z  =

Population

SampleA

SampleB

SampleE

SampleD

SampleC

_

XY

rXY

rXY

rXYrXY

rXY

Page 25: z  =

The t distribution, at N-2 degrees of freedom, can be used to test the probability that the statistic r was drawn from a population with = 0. Table C.

H0 : XY = 0

H1 : XY 0

where

r N - 2

1 - r2

t =