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Lecture #24 Thursday, November 10, 2016 Textbook: 13.1 through 13.6

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1 Lecture #24 Thursday, November 10, 2016 Textbook: 13.1 through 13.6
Statistics 200 Lecture #24 Thursday, November 10, 2016 Textbook: through 13.6 Objectives: • Formulate null and alternative hypotheses involving population means (cont’d from lecture #23) • Calculate T-statistics (for means) instead of Z-statistics (for proportions); determine correct degrees of freedom. • Determine correct test procedure from context of problem. • Relate a hypothesis test to a confidence interval’s coverage of the null value.

2 Hypothesis Tests: One Sample
Response Variable Categorical Quantitative Population Parameter Sample Estimate Inferential Procedure one-proportion Z one-sample t Test statistic Chapter 12 13 P-value Z table T table with df = (n – 1) because σ is unknown

3 Hypothesis Tests: Two independent samples
Response Variable Categorical Quantitative Population Parameter Sample Estimate Inferential Procedure two-proportion Z two-sample t Test statistic Chapter 12 13 P-value Z table T table with df = min{(n1–1), (n2–1)} because σ1 and σ2 are unknown

4 Which procedure should we use?
What kind of data do we have? What kind of research question do we have? Show something specific Estimate a population parameter Categorical (binomial) Quantitative Pop. mean: Hypothesis Test Confidence interval Pop. proportion: p

5 Example: Researchers at Penn State are interested in estimating the percentage of underage students who drink alcohol at least once a month. They should… Construct a confidence interval for a population proportion Perform a hypothesis test for a population proportion Construct a confidence interval for a population mean Perform a hypothesis test for a population mean

6 What is the average number of texts that a STAT 200 student receives on a weekday? To answer this question we should… Construct a confidence interval for a population proportion Perform a hypothesis test for a population proportion Construct a confidence interval for a population mean Perform a hypothesis test for a population mean

7 Do more than 30% of Penn State students binge drink at least once a month on average? To answer this question we should… Construct a confidence interval for a population proportion Perform a hypothesis test for a population proportion Construct a confidence interval for a population mean Perform a hypothesis test for a population mean

8 Relationship between tests and CIs
If a 2-sided 95% CI contains the null value… …we fail to reject H0 at the 0.05 level. If a 2-sided 95% CI does not contain the null value… …we reject H0 at the 0.05 level.

9 If you understand today’s lecture…
13.23, 13.25, 13.63(a), 13.67(a and d), 13.71, 13.73, 13.99 Objectives: • Formulate null and alternative hypotheses involving population means (cont’d from lecture #23) • Calculate T-statistics (for means) instead of Z-statistics (for proportions); determine correct degrees of freedom. • Determine correct test procedure from context of problem. • Relate a hypothesis test to a confidence interval’s coverage of the null value.


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