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  2. Statistical hypothesis test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistical_hypothesis_test

    The critical region [C α, ∞) is realized as the tail of the standard normal distribution. Critical value s of a statistical test are the boundaries of the acceptance region of the test. [41] The acceptance region is the set of values of the test statistic for which the null hypothesis is not rejected.

  3. F-test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-test

    An f-test pdf with d1 and d2 = 10, at a significance level of 0.05. (Red shaded region indicates the critical region) An F-test is a statistical test that compares variances. It's used to determine if the variances of two samples, or if the ratios of variances among multiple samples, are significantly different.

  4. One- and two-tailed tests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-_and_two-tailed_tests

    A two-tailed test applied to the normal distribution. A one-tailed test, showing the p-value as the size of one tail. In statistical significance testing, a one-tailed test and a two-tailed test are alternative ways of computing the statistical significance of a parameter inferred from a data set, in terms of a test statistic. A two-tailed test ...

  5. Statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistics

    In this graph the black line is probability distribution for the test statistic, the critical region is the set of values to the right of the observed data point (observed value of the test statistic) and the p-value is represented by the green area. The standard approach [31] is to test a

  6. Critical value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_value

    Critical value or threshold value can refer to: A quantitative threshold in medicine, chemistry and physics; Critical value (statistics), boundary of the acceptance region while testing a statistical hypothesis; Value of a function at a critical point (mathematics) Critical point (thermodynamics) of a statistical system.

  7. Student's t-distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student's_t-distribution

    The following table lists values for t distributions with ν degrees of freedom for a range of one-sided or two-sided critical regions. The first column is ν , the percentages along the top are confidence levels α , {\displaystyle \ \alpha \ ,} and the numbers in the body of the table are the t α , n − 1 {\displaystyle t_{\alpha ,n-1 ...

  8. Z-test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z-test

    Z-test tests the mean of a distribution. For each significance level in the confidence interval, the Z-test has a single critical value (for example, 1.96 for 5% two tailed) which makes it more convenient than the Student's t-test whose critical values are defined by the sample size (through the corresponding degrees of freedom). Both the Z ...

  9. Cochran's Q test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochran's_Q_test

    The null hypothesis is rejected if the test statistic is in the critical region. If the Cochran test rejects the null hypothesis of equally effective treatments, pairwise multiple comparisons can be made by applying Cochran's Q test on the two treatments of interest. The exact distribution of the T statistic may be computed for small samples.