Hypothesis Testing Flashcards
Traditionally, the field of statistical inference has two subdivisions: _______ and _________.
estimation, hypothesis testing
The steps in testing a hypothesis are as follows (7)
1 Stating the hypotheses.
2 Identifying the appropriate test statistic and its probability distribution.
3 Specifying the significance level.
4 Stating the decision rule.
5 Collecting the data and calculating the test statistic.
6 Making the statistical decision.
7 Making the economic or investment decision.
The _____________ is the hypothesis to be
tested. For example, we could hypothesize that the population mean risk premium for US equities is less than or equal to zero
null hypothesis
The ____________ is the hypothesis accepted when the null hypothesis is rejected. Our alternative
hypothesis is that the population mean risk premium for US equities is greater than zero.
alternative hypothesis
A _________ is a quantity, calculated based on a
sample, whose value is the basis for deciding whether or not to reject the null
hypothesis
test statistic
There are four possible outcomes when we test a null hypothesis:
1 We reject a false null hypothesis. This is a correct decision.
2 We reject a true null hypothesis. This is called a _____________ .
3 We do not reject a false null hypothesis. This is called a _________.
4 We do not reject a true null hypothesis. This is a correct decision.
Type I error, Type II error
Whereas the significance level of a test is the probability of incorrectly rejecting the null, the _______ is the probability of correctly rejecting the null—that is, the probability of rejecting the null when it is false
power of a test
The _______ is the smallest level of significance at which
the null hypothesis can be rejected
p-value
parametric test
Any test or procedure with either mean and variance of a normal distribution or assumptions about the distribution of the population.
We primarily use
ponparametric procedures in three situations: (3)
(1) when the data we use do not meet distributional assumptions
(2) when the data are given in ranks
(3) when the hypothesis we are addressing does not concern a parameter
The ___________ is essentially equivalent to the usual correlation coefficient
calculated on the ranks of the two variables (say X and Y) within their respective
samples.
Spearman rank
correlation coefficient