Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Lesson 6 - Hypothesis Testing

Definitions:

Null Hypothesis ( H0 )
Statement of zero or no change. If the original claim includes equality (<=, =, or >=), it is the null hypothesis. If the original claim does not include equality (<, not equal, >) then the null hypothesis is the complement of the original claim. The null hypothesis always includes the equal sign. The decision is based on the null hypothesis.


Alternative Hypothesis ( H1 or Ha )
Statement which is true if the null hypothesis is false. The type of test (left, right, or two-tail) is based on the alternative hypothesis.

Type I error
Rejecting the null hypothesis when it is true (saying false when true). Usually the more serious error.

Type II error
Failing to reject the null hypothesis when it is false (saying true when false).

Test statistic
Sample statistic used to decide whether to reject or fail to reject the null hypothesis.

Critical region
Set of all values which would cause us to reject H0

Critical value(s)
The value(s) which separate the critical region from the non-critical region. The critical values are determined independently of the sample statistics.

Significance level
The probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when it is true. alpha = 0.05 and alpha = 0.01 are common. If no level of significance is given, use alpha = 0.05. The level of significance is the complement of the level of confidence in estimation.

Decision
A statement based upon the null hypothesis. It is either "reject the null hypothesis" or "fail to reject the null hypothesis". We will never accept the null hypothesis.

Conclusion
A statement which indicates the level of evidence (sufficient or insufficient), at what level of significance, and whether the original claim is rejected (null) or supported (alternative).

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