Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
(Hypothesis test for small sample sizes)
Advertisements

Hypothesis Testing 7.
Testing the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples)
Testing the Difference Between Means (Dependent Samples)
Hypothesis Testing for Variance and Standard Deviation
Section 7.3 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples) 2 Larson/Farber 4th ed.
Testing the Difference Between Means (Small Independent Samples)
Section 7-2 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (n  30)
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample
Chi-Square Tests and the F-Distribution
Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples
Copyright © 2015, 2012, and 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Section 7.3 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (  Unknown).
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples)
Correlation and Regression
7 Elementary Statistics Hypothesis Testing. Introduction to Hypothesis Testing Section 7.1.
Hypothesis Testing for Proportions 1 Section 7.4.
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample Chapter 7. § 7.1 Introduction to Hypothesis Testing.
Section 7.2 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Large Samples) Larson/Farber 4th ed.
Section 10.3 Comparing Two Variances Larson/Farber 4th ed1.
Hypothesis Testing with ONE Sample
Chapter 9 Hypothesis Testing II: two samples Test of significance for sample means (large samples) The difference between “statistical significance” and.
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Large Samples)
Chapter 8 Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples 1. Chapter Outline 8.1 Testing the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples) 8.2 Testing the.
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean ( Known)
Chapter 11 Nonparametric Tests.
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample Chapter 7. § 7.3 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples)
Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples
Section 7.4 Hypothesis Testing for Proportions Larson/Farber 4th ed.
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample Chapter 7. § 7.2 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Large Samples)
Comparing Two Variances
Section 8.3 Testing the Difference Between Means (Dependent Samples)
Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples)
Slide 4- 1 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Active Learning Lecture Slides For use with Classroom Response.
SECTION 7.2 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Large Samples) 1 Larson/Farber 4th ed.
Section 10.2 Independence. Section 10.2 Objectives Use a chi-square distribution to test whether two variables are independent Use a contingency table.
Hypothesis Testing with One Sample Chapter 7. § 7.1 Introduction to Hypothesis Testing.
Chapter Seven Hypothesis Testing with ONE Sample.
Copyright © 2015, 2012, and 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Chapter Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples 8.
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample Let’s begin…
Level of Significance Level of significance Your maximum allowable probability of making a type I error. – Denoted by , the lowercase Greek letter alpha.
Section 7.2 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Large Samples) © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 of 101.
Section 7.4 Hypothesis Testing for Proportions © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 of 101.
Section 7.4 Hypothesis Testing for Proportions © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 of 14.
Section 10.2 Objectives Use a contingency table to find expected frequencies Use a chi-square distribution to test whether two variables are independent.
Section 7.3 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples) © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 of 15.
Section 7.3 Hypothesis Testing for the Mean (Small Samples) © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 of 101.
Rejection Regions and Critical Values Rejection region (or critical region) The range of values for which the null hypothesis is not probable. If a test.
Hypothesis Testing: One-Sample Inference
10 Chapter Chi-Square Tests and the F-Distribution Chapter 10
Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Testing the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples)
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Hypothesis Testing for Proportions
Chapter 8 Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples.
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Chapter 7 Hypothesis Testing with One Sample.
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Chapter 9: Hypothesis Tests Based on a Single Sample
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
P-values P-value (or probability value)
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Elementary Statistics: Picturing The World
Hypothesis Testing for Proportions
Hypothesis Testing for Proportions
Presentation transcript:

Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples Chapter 8 Hypothesis Testing with Two Samples

Testing the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples) § 8.1 Testing the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples)

Two Sample Hypothesis Testing In a two-sample hypothesis test, two parameters from two populations are compared. For a two-sample hypothesis test, the null hypothesis H0 is a statistical hypothesis that usually states there is no difference between the parameters of two populations. The null hypothesis always contains the symbol , =, or . the alternative hypothesis Ha is a statistical hypothesis that is true when H0 is false. The alternative hypothesis always contains the symbol >, , or <.

Two Sample Hypothesis Testing To write a null and alternative hypothesis for a two-sample hypothesis test, translate the claim made about the population parameters from a verbal statement to a mathematical statement. H0: μ1 = μ2 Ha: μ1  μ2 H0: μ1  μ2 Ha: μ1 > μ2 H0: μ1  μ2 Ha: μ1 < μ2 Regardless of which hypotheses used, μ1 = μ2 is always assumed to be true.

Two Sample z-Test Three conditions are necessary to perform a z-test for the difference between two population means μ1 and μ2. The samples must be randomly selected. The samples must be independent. Two samples are independent if the sample selected from one population is not related to the sample selected from the second population. Each sample size must be at least 30, or, if not, each population must have a normal distribution with a known standard deviation.

Two Sample z-Test If these requirements are met, the sampling distribution for (the difference of the sample means) is a normal distribution with mean and standard error of and Sampling distribution for

Two Sample z-Test Two-Sample z-Test for the Difference Between Means A two-sample z-test can be used to test the difference between two population means μ1 and μ2 when a large sample (at least 30) is randomly selected from each population and the samples are independent. The test statistic is and the standardized test statistic is When the samples are large, you can use s1 and s2 in place of 1 and 2. If the samples are not large, you can still use a two-sample z-test, provided the populations are normally distributed and the population standard deviations are known.

Two Sample z-Test for the Means Using a Two-Sample z-Test for the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples) In Words In Symbols State the claim mathematically. Identify the null and alternative hypotheses. Specify the level of significance. Sketch the sampling distribution. Determine the critical value(s). Determine the rejection regions(s). State H0 and Ha. Identify . Use Table 4 in Appendix B. Continued.

Two Sample z-Test for the Means Using a Two-Sample z-Test for the Difference Between Means (Large Independent Samples) In Words In Symbols Find the standardized test statistic. Make a decision to reject or fail to reject the null hypothesis. Interpret the decision in the context of the original claim. If z is in the rejection region, reject H0. Otherwise, fail to reject H0.

Two Sample z-Test for the Means Example: A high school math teacher claims that students in her class will score higher on the math portion of the ACT then students in a colleague’s math class. The mean ACT math score for 49 students in her class is 22.1 and the standard deviation is 4.8. The mean ACT math score for 44 of the colleague’s students is 19.8 and the standard deviation is 5.4. At  = 0.10, can the teacher’s claim be supported? H0: 1  2  = 0.10 Ha: 1 > 2 (Claim) z 1 2 3 -3 -2 -1 z0 = 1.28 Continued.

Two Sample z-Test for the Means Example continued: H0: 1  2 z0 = 1.28 Ha: 1 > 2 (Claim) z -3 -2 -1 1 2 3 The standardized error is Reject H0. The standardized test statistic is There is enough evidence at the 10% level to support the teacher’s claim that her students score better on the ACT.