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Hypothesis Testing and Errors in Hypothesis: Dr. Abdur Rasheed

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Hypothesis Testing

And Errors in
Hypothesis

Dr. Abdur Rasheed


Inferential Statistics

Consist of generalization from sample to population,


performing estimation and hypothesis test, determining
relationship among variables and making predictions.
Inferential Statistics

Let’s say you wanted to know about the favorite ice cream flavors of
everyone in the world. Well, there are about 8 billion people in the
world, and it would be impossible to ask every single person about
their ice cream preferences.
Instead, you would try to sample a representative population of
people and then extrapolate your sample results to entire
population.
While this process isn’t perfect and it is very difficult to avoid errors,
it allows researcher to make well reasoned inference about the
population in question. This is the idea behind the inferential
statistics.
Hypothesis
A hypothesis is an assumption about one or more population
parameters.

A parameter is a characteristic of the population, like its mean or


variance.
The parameter must be identified before analysis.

I assume the mean


height of a class is
5.3 feet
Purpose of hypothesis

The purpose of hypothesis testing is to aid clinician,


researcher or administrator in reaching a conclusion
about a population by examining a sample from
that population.
Examples of hypothesis

• Mean height of IoBM students is μ = 5.1 feet

• The population mean monthly cell phone bill of city is: μ = 425

• The average number of TV sets in U.S. Homes is equal to three; μ = 3


Hypothesis
Remember

• It Is always about a population parameter, not


about a sample statistic.

• Sample evidence is used to assess the probability

that the claim about the population parameter is

true
Hypothesis

Statistical Research
hypothesis hypothesis
Research Hypothesis
• It is the assumption that motivate the

research.

• It is usually the result of long observation by

the researcher.

• This hypothesis led directly to the second

type of hypothesis
Statistical Hypothesis
• This is stated in a way that can be evaluated by
appropriate statistical technique.
Statistical hypothesis
It is composed of two types:

Null hypothesis( Ho):


It is the particular hypothesis under test, and it is
the hypothesis of “no difference”

Alternative hypothesis (HA):


Apposite null hypothesis
Properties of Null hypothesis
Null Hypothesis H0
• Always contains ‘=‘ sign i.e., (=, ≤, ≥ )
e.g., the average height of students of a class is 5.6
feet. H0 : µ = 5.6
• Null hypothesis may or may not be rejected.
Properties of Alternative hypothesis
• Apposite of null hypothesis
contain signs of (≠, <, > )
• e.g., the average height of students of a class is
< 5.6 feet. HA : µ < 5.6
• Alternative hypothesis may or may not be
accepted.
• Is generally the hypothesis that the researcher is
trying to prove. Evidence is always examined
with respect to H1, never with respect to H0.
Remember

What we hope or expect to able to conclude as a result of the


test usually should be placed in alternative hypothesis

The null hypothesis should contain statement of equality (=, ≤, ≥ )

The alternative hypothesis should contain statement with (≠, <, > )

The null hypothesis is the hypothesis that is tested.

The null and alternative hypothesis are complementary


Examples 1
A generic brand of the anti-histamine Diphenhydramine markets a
capsule with a 50 milligram dose. The manufacturer is worried that the
machine that fills the capsules has come out of calibration and is no
longer creating capsules with the appropriate dosage.

Null Hypothesis: On the average, the dosage sold under this

brand is 50 mg (population mean dosage = 50 mg).

Alternative Hypothesis: On the average, the dosage sold under

this brand is not 50 mg (population mean dosage ≠ 50 mg).


Examples 2
To test whether cloud seeding increases the average annual rainfall in
an area which usually has an average annual rainfall of 20 cm, we
define the null and alternative hypotheses as follows,
where μ represents the average rainfall after cloud seeding.

H0: µ ≤ 20 (i.e. average rainfall does not increase after cloud


seeding)

HA: µ > 20 (i.e. average rainfall increases after cloud seeding)


Examples 3
Researchers are interested in the mean age of certain population. Let
us say that they are asking the question. Can we conclude that the
mean age of this population is different from 30 years?

H0: µ = 30 years (i.e. population mean age is not different from 30)

HA: µ ≠ 30 years (i.e. population mean age is different from 30)


Examples 4
Bon Air Elementary School has 1000 students. The principal of the school
thinks that the average IQ of students at Bon Air is at least 110. To prove
her point, she administers an IQ test to 20 randomly selected students.
Among the sampled students, the average IQ is 108 with a standard
deviation of 10.

H0: µ ≥ 110 (i.e. students’ average IQ is at least 110)

HA: µ < 110 (i.e. students’ average IQ is less than 110)


Errors

Rejection of null hypothesis means acceptance of


alternative hypothesis

Rejection of alternative hypothesis means


acceptance of null hypothesis
We test null hypothesis
We will either reject or accept null
hypothesis

There is a possibility that we may reject true null hypothesis or

accept false null hypothesis


Errors
Type I error

This error is committed when true null hypothesis is rejected.

Reject null hypothesis when it is true

The rate of type of I error is also called size of the test

The probability of committing type I error is α (level of significance)

If type I error is fixed as 5%, it means that there are about 5

chance in 100 that we will reject null hypothesis when null

hypothesis is true.
Errors
Type II error

This error is committed when false null hypothesis is accepted


Accept = Fail to reject.
Accept null hypothesis when it is false
The probability of committing type II error is β

NOTE: we do not say that we accept the null hypothesis if


a statistician is around…

Fail to reject false null hypothesis


Actual state of nature
H0 is true H0 is false

Type I
Correct
Reject H0 Error
Decision
Type II
Accept H0 Correct
Error
Power of the test
Probability of rejection of false null hypothesis

“Power” of a test is the probability of rejecting null

hypothesis when it is false.

“Power” = 1 -P(Type II error)

To minimize the P(Type II error), we equivalently want to

maximize power.

But power depends on the value under the alternative

hypothesis ...
Power of the test

Power is probability, so number between


0 and 1.
0 is bad!
1 is good!

Need to make power as high as


possible.
Hypothesis Testing…
The probability of a Type I error is denoted as α (Greek letter alpha).
The probability of a type II error is β (Greek letter beta).

The two probabilities are inversely related. Decreasing one increases


the other, for a fixed sample size.

In other words, you can’t have  and β both real small for
any old sample size. You may have to take a much larger
sample size, or in the court example, you need much more
evidence.

11.26
The goal is to determine whether there is enough evidence to infer that

the alternative hypothesis is true, or the null is not likely to be true.

There are two possible decisions:

Conclude that there is enough evidence to support the alternative

hypothesis. Reject the null.

Conclude that there is not enough evidence to support the

alternative hypothesis. Fail to reject the null.


A Type I error is the probability of telling you things are wrong, given

that things are correct.

A Type II error is the probability of telling you things are correct, given

that things are wrong.

Power is the probability of telling you things are wrong, given that

things are wrong.

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