HYPOTHESIS
HYPOTHESIS
HYPOTHESIS
Franklin E. Benitez
Hypothesis
•is an educational claim, guess or
conjecture about a population based on a
characteristic of a sample
Example:
𝐻0 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school
is at most 2.5 hours. (𝐻0 : 𝜇 ≤ 2.5)
𝐻𝐴 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school
is greater than 2.5 hours. (𝐻𝐴 : 𝜇 > 2.5)
Left-tailed Test
a type of directional test of hypothesis or one-tailed test that is used
when an assertion is made that the parameter falls within the
negative end of the distribution. In a left-tailed test, the alternative
hypothesis uses comparatives such as less than, smaller than, inferior
to, lower than, below, decreased, etc.
Example:
𝐻0 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school is
at least 2.5 hours. (𝐻0 : 𝜇 ≥ 2.5)
𝐻𝐴 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school is
less than 2.5 hours. (𝐻𝐴 : 𝜇 < 2.5)
Non-directional Test of Hypothesis
or Two-tailed Test
a type of hypothesis test that makes use of two opposite sides or tails of the
distribution. It is used when no assertion is made on whether the parameter falls
within the positive or negative end of the distribution. In a two-tailed test, the
alternative hypothesis uses comparatives such as not equal to, different from, not
the same as, etc.
Example:
𝐻0 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school
is equal to 2.5 hours. (𝐻0 : 𝜇 = 2.5)
𝐻𝐴 : The mean number of hours
students spend studying after school
is not 2.5 hours. (𝐻𝐴 : 𝜇 ≠ 2.5)
Type I Error
an error in hypothesis testing that occurs when a true null
hypothesis is rejected
Example:
Let’s say a medical researcher has the following hypotheses about the
population mean number 𝜇 of patients in an emergency room daily.
𝐻𝐴 : The mean number of patients in the emergency room daily is not 74.
Suppose the null hypothesis is true. That is, the population mean number of
patients in the emergency room daily is really 74. A type I error will occur if
the medical researcher concludes that the mean number of patients is not
74, thus rejecting the true null hypothesis.
Type II Error
an error in hypothesis testing that occurs when a false null
hypothesis is not rejected
Example:
Let’s say a medical researcher has the following hypotheses about the
population mean number 𝜇 of patients in an emergency room daily.
𝐻𝐴 : The mean number of patients in the emergency room daily is not 74.
Suppose the null hypothesis is not true; that is, the mean number of patients
in the emergency room daily is not 74. A type II error will occur if the medical
researcher concludes that the mean number of patients is 74, thus not
rejecting the false null hypothesis.
TRY IT
Consider the following hypotheses.
𝐻𝑂 : 𝜇 = 200
𝐻𝐴 : 𝜇 ≠ 200
No error committed
Identifying
Parameters to Be
Tested
Parameter
characteristic or measure of a population
Example: