DECK 12 INFERENCE MIXED Flashcards
what is a biased estimator?
When the sampling distribution (pile of sample stats, x bars or p hats) is NOT centered on the true population parameter. If you were weighing people and there was a 1 pound weight on the scale, the pile would be centered 1 pound higher. Baised.
What are the three chi-squared models?
goodness of fit, test for homogeneity, test for independence
What is a critical value?
It is the amount of standard errors you’ll reach out, depending on your confidence (a t or z). Example.. 68% crit z = 1 .. For 95% crit z = 2 (well, 1.96).. For means.. Use t crits
you reject when _____________ evidence
you reject when YOU HAVE EVIDENCE
In order to reject a null hypothesis, you need ___________
evidence
What is the missed opportunity error? (the “I didn’t notice” error)
Type 2
What is alpha?
It is the rejection area. Generally, we use .05. The significance level.
What is a sampLING distribution?
a pile of statistics. A pile of p-hats or x-bars.
What is the null model (the sampling distribution) in a 2 sample mean t-test?
a pile of differences of TWO MEANS samples, taken from a bunch of PAIRS of samples. Take two samples, calculate two means, subtract to get a difference, PUT THE DIFFERENCE IN THE PILE.
What is the NULL HYPOTHESIS?
The DULL HYPOTHESIS, the nothing changed hypothesis, the no-difference hypothesis, the “he’s telling the truth” hypothesis, the “No trickery” hypothesis
How is a margin of error different from a standard error?
A margin of error is a NUMBER OF STANDARD ERRORS. It is how far up or down you go in a confidence interval. A standard error tells you about the spread of a pile of statistics (a sampling distribution).
What is the differnce between standard error and standard deviation?
Standard error is the typical distance a STATISTIC is from the mean in a sampling distribution (pile of a bunch of sample’s statistics) and Standard Error is the typical distance a DATUM is from the mean in a pile of raw data.
For both a chi squared test for independence and a regression t test you are looking for an association, how do the null hypotheses differ?
The chi squared will be in words.. Ho: the variables are not associated. The regression t test will be with symbols (and words). Ho: Beta = 0 (the slope is zero) . Saying “beta=0” is the same as saying “there is no association”
when do you need crits?
in confidence intervals (and old fashioned hyp tests.. We look at Z to see if greater than crit.)
you fail to reject when ____________ evidence
you fail to reject when you DON’T HAVE EVIDENCE
notation: what is x-bar
mean of your sample
What is the null for a chi squared test for homogeneity?
The [samples of —] are similarly distributed.
How is a paired T test different from a 2 sample mean T test?
A paired test talks about an AVERAGE OF DIFFERENCES from one list, whereas a 2 sample mean t-test talks about a DIFFERENCE OF AVERAGES between two samples.
when is data “paired”
when you have 2 measurements of the same variable on the same subject (or matched subjects)
What is the null for a 2 sample mean T?
mu1=mu2 OR mu1-mu2=0 there is no diff
When you are doing PAIRED or MATCHED or BLOCKED tests.. What are you finding?
The average difference.. You are doing 1 sample procedures on a NEW THIRD LIST OF DIFFERENCES
What is a confidence interval?
it is a parameter catcher.. Like a fishing net. We stand at our statistic, and reach up and down a margin of error, and hope to CATCH the parameter? sometimes we do, sometimes we don’t? but we never know.. Mooo hooo hooo haaaa haaa haaa (evil laugh)
What does CLT say about the distribution of the population?
Not much… just that it doesn’t matter what it is.. With large samples.. The SAMPLING dist will be approx normal (dist of stats.. NOT DATA)
What is difference between population of interest and parameter of interest?
Population is the WHO (subjects you measure, beads people) Parameter is the actual number you want (like % of or AVG)