HYPOTHESIS TESTS VS CONFIDENCE INTERVALS. According to the CDC Web site, 50% of high school students have never smoked a cigarette. Mary wonders whether.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Advertisements

Hypothesis Testing When “p” is small, we reject the Ho.
Do political “attack ads” work
Business Statistics for Managerial Decision
Chapter 12: Inference for Proportions
Chapter 9 Testing a Claim
Significance Tests in practice Chapter Tests about a population mean  When we don’t know the population standard deviation σ, we perform a one.
Carrying out a significance test
LESSON Tests about a Population Parameter.
Tests About a Population Proportion
CONFIDENCE INTERVALS Feb. 18 th, A STATS PROFESSOR ASKED HER STUDENTS WHETHER OR NOT THEY WERE REGISTERED TO VOTE. IN A SAMPLE OF 50 OF HER STUDENTS.
S-012 Testing statistical hypotheses The CI approach The NHST approach.
Introduction to Inferece BPS chapter 14 © 2010 W.H. Freeman and Company.
Section 9.2 Tests About a Population Proportion. Section 9.2 Tests About a Population Proportion After this section, you should be able to… CHECK conditions.
+ Chapter 12: Inference for Proportions Section 12.1 Inference for a Population Proportion.
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.2 Tests About a Population Proportion.
Homework Questions?. Section 9.2 Tests about a Population Proportion.
Tests of Significance: The Basics BPS chapter 15 © 2006 W.H. Freeman and Company.
Chapter 8 Estimating with Confidence.  A point estimator is a statistic that provides an estimate of a population parameter. The value of that statistic.
2 sample interval proportions sample Shown with two examples.
1 Chapter 9: Introduction to Inference. 2 Thumbtack Activity Toss your thumbtack in the air and record whether it lands either point up (U) or point down.
Copyright © 2013, 2009, and 2007, Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 10 Comparing Two Groups Section 10.1 Categorical Response: Comparing Two Proportions.
Chapter 9 Day 2 Tests About a Population Proportion.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 9: Testing a Claim Section 9.2 Tests About a Population Proportion.
Comparing Two Proportions. AP Statistics Chap 13-2 Two Population Proportions The point estimate for the difference is p 1 – p 2 Population proportions.
+ Chapter 9 Testing a Claim 9.1Significance Tests: The Basics 9.2Tests about a Population Proportion 9.3Tests about a Population Mean.
The Practice of Statistics, 5th Edition Starnes, Tabor, Yates, Moore Bedford Freeman Worth Publishers CHAPTER 9 Testing a Claim 9.2 Tests About a Population.
Back to the Z Joint Decide if the following situations call for a mean or a proportions: The Center for Disease Control took a random sample of 165 patients.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Unit 5: Hypothesis Testing.
One Prop Z-Test. StepsOne Proportion Z Interval Pp = proportion of _________ who _____________ CRandom: SRS Normality: Independence: pop ≥ 10n FOne Prop.
Statistics for Business and Economics Module 1:Probability Theory and Statistical Inference Spring 2010 Lecture 8: Tests of significance and confidence.
Tests about a Population Proportion Textbook Section 9.2.
Daniel S. Yates The Practice of Statistics Third Edition Chapter 12: Significance Tests in Practice Copyright © 2008 by W. H. Freeman & Company.
The Practice of Statistics Third Edition Chapter 12: Significance Tests in Practice Copyright © 2008 by W. H. Freeman & Company Daniel S. Yates.
Warm Up 1. Write the four steps in writing a confidence interval and how to check conditions (step 2) for means. 2. Write the four steps involved in test.
 Confidence Intervals  Around a proportion  Significance Tests  Not Every Difference Counts  Difference in Proportions  Difference in Means.
+ Chapter 9 Testing a Claim 9.1Significance Tests: The Basics 9.2Tests about a Population Proportion 9.3Tests about a Population Mean.
Tests About a Population Proportion
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Comparing Two Proportions
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Warm UP Read the Perfect Potatoes Example on P. 548
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Significance Tests: A Four-Step Process
Chapter Review Problems
Hypothesis Tests for Proportions
Significance Tests: The Basics
Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers.
Tests About a Population Proportion
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9 Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Comparing Two Proportions
CHAPTER 9 Testing a Claim
CHAPTER 9 Testing a Claim
CHAPTER 9 Testing a Claim
Pull 2 samples of 20 pennies and record both averages (2 dots).
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Comparing Two Proportions
Comparing Two Proportions
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Unit 5: Hypothesis Testing
Chapter 9: Testing a Claim
Significance Tests: The Basics
Presentation transcript:

HYPOTHESIS TESTS VS CONFIDENCE INTERVALS

According to the CDC Web site, 50% of high school students have never smoked a cigarette. Mary wonders whether this national result holds true in her large urban high school. For her AP Stats class project, Mary surveys a SRS of 150 students from her school. She gets responses from all 150 students, and 90 say that they have never smoked a cigarette. What should Mary conclude? Use a 5% significance level.

According to the CDC Web site, 50% of high school students have never smoked a cigarette. Mary wonders what the percentage is in her large urban high school. For her AP Stats class project, Mary surveys a SRS of 150 students from her school. She gets responses from all 150 students, and 90 say that they have never smoked a cigarette. Construct a 95% confidence interval to estimate the proportion of students in Mary’s school who have never smoked.

Two Tailed Test with a 5% significance level is similar to a 95% confidence level, but what is different?

What makes them Different? In the Hypothesis Test you are testing the hypotheses: If you reject the null hypothesis, all you know is that the proportion who smoke is not 50%. The confidence interval is much more informative. We get possible values of the proportion who smoke and we can tell that 50% is not likely.

Minitab Printout Test and CI for One Proportion Test of p = 0.5 vs p not = 0.5 SamplexNSample p95% CIz-ValueP-Value ( , )

The 95% interval gives an approximate range of p o ’s that would not be rejected by a two-sided test at the 5% significance level. The link is not perfect because the standard error used for the confidence interval is based on the sample proportions while the denominator of the test statistic is based on the population proportion. Test Statistic Confidence Interval

According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, job stress poses a major threat to the health of workers. In a national survey of restaurant employees, 75% said that work stress had a negative impact on their personal lives. Managers of a large restaurant chain wonder whether this national result holds for their employees. A random sample of 100 employees finds that 68 answer “Yes” when asked, “Does work stree have a negative impact on your personal life?” Is this a good reason to think that the proportions of all employees in this chain who would say “Yes” differs from the national proportion of 0.75?

The figure below shows Minitab output from a significance test and confidence interval for the restaurant worker data on the previous slide. Explain how the confidence interval is consistent with, but gives more information that the test. Test and CI for One Proportion Test of p = 0.75 vs p not = 0.75 SamplexNSample p95% CIz-ValueP-Value ( , )

Homework p. 587 (64-74)even (79-83)