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Stat 301 – Day 21 Adjusted Wald Intervals Power. Last Time – Confidence Interval for  When goal is to estimate the value of the population proportion.

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Presentation on theme: "Stat 301 – Day 21 Adjusted Wald Intervals Power. Last Time – Confidence Interval for  When goal is to estimate the value of the population proportion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stat 301 – Day 21 Adjusted Wald Intervals Power

2 Last Time – Confidence Interval for  When goal is to estimate the value of the population proportion  General form: estimate + margin of error If the Central Limit Theorem applies (large enough sample size), then an approximate C% confidence interval for  is: Margin-of-error “Critical value”: Determined by confidence level (p. 326) Wider with larger confidence levels Narrower with larger sample size “Standard error”

3 “Confidence” If repeatedly randomly sample from the population (with same sample size), then in the long run, roughly 95% of intervals will succeed in capturing the population proportion.

4 PP 4.3.12 (p. 336) 1. Let  represent the proportion of all voters who were planning to vote for Landon 2. Technical conditions: n large enough for CLT  Use the sample proportions here too… 3. Calculation 4. Interpretation: I’m 99.9% confident that between 56.9 and 57.1% of voters planned to vote for Landon?

5 Last Time – Confidence Intervals Have to have a random sample! Gallup poll ExampleExample

6 Quiz 17

7 Investigation 4.3.6 (p. 331) If given the choice, which would you prefer to hear first – good news or bad news? Descriptive statistics Inferential statistics  Let  represent the proportion of all Cal Poly students who prefer to hear bad news first  95% confidence interval for   Valid?

8 Investigation 4.3.6 (p. 331)

9 Back to Inv 4.3.4 (p. 315) H 0 :  = 2/3 vs. H a :  ≠ 2/3 We failed to reject 2/3 as a plausible value for the population parameter. H 0 :  =.5 vs. H a :  >.5 (most turn right) We would reject.5 (one-sided p-value =.001) Is it possible we are wrong in either case?

10 Type I/Type II Errors If we reject the null hypothesis, but it is actually true, we have committed a Type I Error When we fail to reject the null hypothesis, if it was actually false, we have committed a Type II Error Truth H 0 trueH 0 false Our decision Reject H 0 Type I error FTR H 0 Type II error

11 What is the probability of a Type I Error? H 0 :  = 2/3 vs. H a :  ≠ 2/3 How often will we come to the decision to reject? “Rejection Region” >.749 <.584

12 What is the probability of a type II error? H 0 :  = 2/3 vs. H a :  ≠ 2/3 How often will we come to the decision to fail to reject when we shouldn’t? Well first, what is the right value? What if  =.5? How often fail to reject?

13 Type I Error Type II Error Power

14 Interpretation If  actually equals.5, then there is a very high probability we will reject H 0 :  = 2/3. This sample size seems reasonably sensitive to a difference that large. But what if  actually equals.6? How often will we be able to detect that (correct reject 2/3)?

15 P. 319 Part (l)

16 For Thursday Part (l) on p. 319 PP 4.3.4 (mostly d) HW 5 Miniproject 2 proposals next week


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