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Statistical Inference on Two Populations

Statistical Inference on Two Populations. Many real world problems involve the comparison of 2 populations Examples: Medical trial in which participants are randomly assigned a drug or a placebo Quality control testing that compares lifetime of product A to product B

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Statistical Inference on Two Populations

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  1. Statistical Inference on Two Populations • Many real world problems involve the comparison of 2 populations • Examples: • Medical trial in which participants are randomly assigned a drug or a placebo • Quality control testing that compares lifetime of product A to product B • Educational testing to compare the performance of men to women on a standardized test

  2. Independent Samples • Independent samples are those samples taken from the same population, or different populations, which have no effect on each another. • Can have independent samples when: • Similar subjects receive different treatments • Dissimilar subjects receive the same treatment

  3. Dependent Samples • Dependent samples have some relationship so that each value in one sample is paired with a corresponding value in the other sample. • Called matched pairs or paired samples • Can occur when values are clearly paired, or when the same attribute is measured twice on each subject (i.e. pre/post or before/after

  4. Inference About Two Means • Appropriate hypothesis for comparing 2 means: • Equivalent hypothesis are:

  5. Comparing Two MeansDependent Samples • Dependent data is collected in pairs (x1,x2) • The measure of interest is usually the difference, d= x1-x2. • Hypotheses

  6. Comparing Two MeansDependent Samples • Test Statistic: • Rejection Region (3 cases of H1) • Two-tailed: For H1: μd ≠ 0, Reject H0 for |t| ≥ tα/2 • Left-tailed: For H1: μd < 0, Reject H0 for t ≤ -tα • Right-tailed: For H1: μd > 0, Reject H0 for t ≥ tα

  7. Comparing Two MeansDependent Samples • Confidence Interval:

  8. Comparing Two MeansIndependent Samples (n1,n2 ≥ 30) • Test Statistic: • Rejection Region (3 cases of H1): • Two-tailed: For H1: μ1 ≠ μ2, Reject H0 for |Z| ≥ zα/2 • Left-tailed: For H1: μ1 < μ2, Reject H0 for Z ≤ -zα • Right-tailed: For H1: μ1 > μ2, Reject H0 for Z ≥ zα

  9. Comparing Two MeansIndependent Samples (n1,n2 ≥ 30) • Confidence Interval:

  10. Comparing Two MeansIndependent Samples (n1 or n2 < 30) • Test Statistic: • Rejection Region (3 cases of H1): • Two-tailed: For H1: μ1 ≠ μ2, Reject H0 for |T| ≥ tα/2 • Left-tailed: For H1: μ1 < μ2, Reject H0 for T ≤ -tα • Right-tailed: For H1: μ1 > μ2, Reject H0 for T ≥ tα

  11. Comparing Two MeansIndependent Samples (n1 or n2 < 30) • Degrees of freedom:

  12. Comparing Two MeansIndependent Samples (n1 or n2 < 30) • Confidence Interval:

  13. Inference About Two Proportions • Appropriate hypothesis for comparing 2 proportions: • Equivalent hypothesis are:

  14. Comparing Two Population Proportions • Test Statistic: • Rejection Region (3 cases of H1) • Two-tailed: For H1: p1 ≠ p2, Reject H0 for |Z| ≥ zα/2 • Left-tailed: For H1: p1 < p2, Reject H0 for Z ≤ -zα • Right-tailed: For H1: p1 > p2, Reject H0 for Z ≥ zα

  15. Comparing Two Population Proportions • Confidence Interval:

  16. Inference About Two Variances • Appropriate hypothesis for comparing 2 variances or standard deviations: • Equivalent hypothesis are:

  17. Comparing Two Population Variances • Test Statistic:

  18. Comparing Two Population Variances • Rejection Region (3 cases of H1) • Two-tailed: For H1: s1 ≠ s2, Reject H0 for F ≤ F1-α/2, or F ≥ Fα/2 • Left-tailed: For H1: s1 < s2, Reject H0 for F ≤ F1-α • Right-tailed: For H1: s1 > s2, Reject H0 for F ≥ Fα

  19. Comparing Two Population Variances • Confidence Interval:

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