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Hypothesis Testing for Population Means and Proportions

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Title: Hypothesis Testing for Population Means and Proportions


1
  • Hypothesis Testing for Population Means and
    Proportions

2
Topics
  • Hypothesis testing for population means
  • z test for the simple case (in last lecture)
  • z test for large samples
  • t test for small samples for normal distributions
  • Hypothesis testing for population proportions
  • z test for large samples

3
z-test for Large Sample Tests
  • We have previously assumed that the population
    standard deviationsis known in the simple case.
  • In general, we do not know the population
    standard deviation, so we estimate its value with
    the standard deviation s from an SRS of the
    population.
  • When the sample size is large, the z tests are
    easily modified to yield valid test procedures
    without requiring either a normal population or
    known s.
  • The rule of thumb n gt 40 will again be used to
    characterize a large sample size.

4
z-test for Large Sample Tests (Cont.)
  • Test statistic
  • Rejection regions and P-values
  • The same as in the simple case
  • Determination of ß and the necessary sample size
  • Step I Specifying a plausible value of s
  • Step II Use the simple case formulas, plug in
    thes estimation for step I.

5
t-test for Small Sample Normal Distribution
  • z-tests are justified for large sample tests by
    the fact that A large n implies that the sample
    standard deviation s will be close tosfor most
    samples.
  • For small samples, s and sare not that close any
    more. So z-tests are not valid any more.
  • Let X1,., Xn be a simple random sample from N(µ,
    s). µ and s are both unknown, andµ is the
    parameter of interest.
  • The standardized variable

6
The t Distribution
  • Facts about the t distribution
  • Different distribution for different sample sizes
  • Density curve for any t distribution is symmetric
    about 0 and bell-shaped
  • Spread of the t distribution decreases as the
    degrees of freedom of the distribution increase
  • Similar to the standard normal density curve, but
    t distribution has fatter tails
  • Asymptotically, t distribution is
    indistinguishable from standard normal
    distribution

7
Table A.5 Critical Values for t Distributions
8
t-test for Small Sample Normal Distribution
(Cont.)
  • To test the hypothesis H0µ µ0 based on an SRS
    of size n, compute t test statistic
  • When H0 is true, the test statistic T has a t
    distribution with n -1 df.
  • The rejection regions and P-values for the t
    tests can be obtained similarly as for the
    previous cases.

9
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10
Recap Population Proportion
  • Let p be the proportion of successes in a
    population. A random sample of size n is
    selected, and X is the number of successes in
    the sample.
  • Suppose n is small relative to the population
    size, then X can be regarded as a binomial random
    variable with

11
Recap Population Proportion (Cont.)
  • We use the sample proportion as an
    estimator of the population proportion.
  • We have
  • Hence is an unbiased estimator of the
    population proportion.

12
Recap Population Proportion (Cont.)
  • When n is large, is approximately normal.
    Thus
  • is approximately standard normal.
  • We can use this z statistic to carry out
    hypotheses for
  • H0 p p0 against one of the following
    alternative hypotheses
  • Ha p gt p0
  • Ha p lt p0
  • Ha p ? p0

13
Large Sample z-test for a Population Proportion
  • The null hypothesis H0 p p0
  • The test statistic is

Alternative Hypothesis P-value Rejection Region for Level a Test
Ha p gt p0 P(Z z) z za
Ha p lt p0 P(Z z) z - za
Ha p ? p0 2P(Z z ) z za/2
14
Determination of ß
  • To calculate the probability of a Type II error,
    suppose that H0 is not true and that p p ?
    instead. Then Z still has approximately a normal
    distribution but
  • ,
  • The probability of a Type II error can be
    computed by using the given mean and variance to
    standardize and then referring to the standard
    normal cdf.

15
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16
Determination of the Sample Size
  • If it is desired that the level atest also have
    ß(p?) ß for a specified value of ß, this
    equation can be solved for the necessary n as in
    population mean tests.
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