Justifying Claims: Difference of Two Means - AP Statistics
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What does '95% confidence' imply about repeated sampling?
What does '95% confidence' imply about repeated sampling?
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95% of intervals will capture true mean difference. Long-run frequency of intervals containing true parameter.
95% of intervals will capture true mean difference. Long-run frequency of intervals containing true parameter.
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State the formula for a confidence interval for a difference of means.
State the formula for a confidence interval for a difference of means.
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$(\bar{x}_1 - \bar{x}_2) ,\pm, z^* \sqrt{\frac{s_1^2}{n_1} + \frac{s_2^2}{n_2}}$. Uses difference of sample means plus/minus critical value times SE.
$(\bar{x}_1 - \bar{x}_2) ,\pm, z^* \sqrt{\frac{s_1^2}{n_1} + \frac{s_2^2}{n_2}}$. Uses difference of sample means plus/minus critical value times SE.
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Identify the null hypothesis for testing difference of two means.
Identify the null hypothesis for testing difference of two means.
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$H_0: \mu_1 - \mu_2 = 0$. States no difference exists between population means.
$H_0: \mu_1 - \mu_2 = 0$. States no difference exists between population means.
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Identify the alternative hypothesis for testing difference of two means.
Identify the alternative hypothesis for testing difference of two means.
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$H_a: \mu_1 - \mu_2 \neq 0$. States a difference exists between population means.
$H_a: \mu_1 - \mu_2 \neq 0$. States a difference exists between population means.
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What is the standard error in the difference of two means?
What is the standard error in the difference of two means?
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$\sqrt{\frac{s_1^2}{n_1} + \frac{s_2^2}{n_2}}$. Measures variability in the sampling distribution of differences.
$\sqrt{\frac{s_1^2}{n_1} + \frac{s_2^2}{n_2}}$. Measures variability in the sampling distribution of differences.
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Find the margin of error for a 95% confidence interval.
Find the margin of error for a 95% confidence interval.
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$z^* \times \text{standard error}$. Critical value multiplied by standard error gives margin of error.
$z^* \times \text{standard error}$. Critical value multiplied by standard error gives margin of error.
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What is the critical value for a 95% confidence level?
What is the critical value for a 95% confidence level?
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Approximately $1.96$. Standard normal value that captures 95% of distribution.
Approximately $1.96$. Standard normal value that captures 95% of distribution.
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Determine if a confidence interval includes zero.
Determine if a confidence interval includes zero.
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Check if $0$ falls within the interval range. Zero in interval suggests no significant difference between means.
Check if $0$ falls within the interval range. Zero in interval suggests no significant difference between means.
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Why is zero important in the context of confidence intervals?
Why is zero important in the context of confidence intervals?
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It indicates no difference between means if in interval. Zero represents no difference between the two population means.
It indicates no difference between means if in interval. Zero represents no difference between the two population means.
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Which condition must be met for using a normal model in CI?
Which condition must be met for using a normal model in CI?
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Sample size large or population normal. CLT applies with large samples; normality assumed otherwise.
Sample size large or population normal. CLT applies with large samples; normality assumed otherwise.
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When is the t-distribution used over the z-distribution?
When is the t-distribution used over the z-distribution?
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When population standard deviations are unknown. t-distribution accounts for additional uncertainty from unknown σ.
When population standard deviations are unknown. t-distribution accounts for additional uncertainty from unknown σ.
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What does a narrower confidence interval imply?
What does a narrower confidence interval imply?
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More precision in the estimate of the mean difference. Smaller interval range indicates more precise estimation.
More precision in the estimate of the mean difference. Smaller interval range indicates more precise estimation.
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If CI for difference of means is entirely positive, what is concluded?
If CI for difference of means is entirely positive, what is concluded?
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Mean of first group is larger than second group. All values positive means $\mu_1 > \mu_2$ consistently.
Mean of first group is larger than second group. All values positive means $\mu_1 > \mu_2$ consistently.
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If CI for difference of means is entirely negative, what is concluded?
If CI for difference of means is entirely negative, what is concluded?
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Mean of first group is smaller than second group. All values negative means $\mu_1 < \mu_2$ consistently.
Mean of first group is smaller than second group. All values negative means $\mu_1 < \mu_2$ consistently.
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How does increasing confidence level affect CI width?
How does increasing confidence level affect CI width?
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Increases width of confidence interval. Higher confidence requires wider interval to capture parameter.
Increases width of confidence interval. Higher confidence requires wider interval to capture parameter.
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What is the impact of high variability on CI?
What is the impact of high variability on CI?
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Wider confidence interval. Greater spread in data increases uncertainty in estimates.
Wider confidence interval. Greater spread in data increases uncertainty in estimates.
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What is the purpose of a confidence interval?
What is the purpose of a confidence interval?
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Estimate range where a population parameter lies. Provides plausible range for unknown population parameter.
Estimate range where a population parameter lies. Provides plausible range for unknown population parameter.
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What assumption is needed about samples for CI?
What assumption is needed about samples for CI?
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Independence between samples. Samples must be independent for valid statistical inference.
Independence between samples. Samples must be independent for valid statistical inference.
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What does the term 'statistically significant' mean?
What does the term 'statistically significant' mean?
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Observed effect unlikely due to chance alone. Result is unlikely to occur by random variation alone.
Observed effect unlikely due to chance alone. Result is unlikely to occur by random variation alone.
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What role does variability play in confidence intervals?
What role does variability play in confidence intervals?
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Higher variability leads to wider intervals. More variable data creates less precise interval estimates.
Higher variability leads to wider intervals. More variable data creates less precise interval estimates.
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Define the term 'point estimate'.
Define the term 'point estimate'.
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Single value estimate of a population parameter. Single best guess for the unknown parameter value.
Single value estimate of a population parameter. Single best guess for the unknown parameter value.
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How do you interpret a confidence interval that includes zero?
How do you interpret a confidence interval that includes zero?
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No significant difference between means. Zero suggests means could be equal; no significant difference.
No significant difference between means. Zero suggests means could be equal; no significant difference.
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What is the meaning of $\bar{x}_1$ and $\bar{x}_2$?
What is the meaning of $\bar{x}_1$ and $\bar{x}_2$?
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Sample means of two different groups. Sample means from groups 1 and 2 respectively.
Sample means of two different groups. Sample means from groups 1 and 2 respectively.
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How does sample size affect the margin of error?
How does sample size affect the margin of error?
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Larger sample size reduces margin of error. Larger n decreases standard error, reducing margin of error.
Larger sample size reduces margin of error. Larger n decreases standard error, reducing margin of error.
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What is the relationship between confidence level and precision?
What is the relationship between confidence level and precision?
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Higher confidence level means less precision. Trade-off between confidence and interval width exists.
Higher confidence level means less precision. Trade-off between confidence and interval width exists.
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Calculate the lower bound: $CI = (5, 15)$
Calculate the lower bound: $CI = (5, 15)$
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Lower bound is $5$. Lower bound is the smaller endpoint value.
Lower bound is $5$. Lower bound is the smaller endpoint value.
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Calculate the upper bound: $CI = (5, 15)$
Calculate the upper bound: $CI = (5, 15)$
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Upper bound is $15$. Upper bound is the larger endpoint value.
Upper bound is $15$. Upper bound is the larger endpoint value.
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Explain why a CI might not include zero.
Explain why a CI might not include zero.
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Indicates a significant difference exists. Zero excluded means difference is statistically detectable.
Indicates a significant difference exists. Zero excluded means difference is statistically detectable.
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What does 'fail to reject $H_0$' imply about CI?
What does 'fail to reject $H_0$' imply about CI?
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CI includes $0$; no significant difference. $0$ in CI means no significant difference detected.
CI includes $0$; no significant difference. $0$ in CI means no significant difference detected.
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What is the effect of a smaller sample size on CI?
What is the effect of a smaller sample size on CI?
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Wider confidence interval. Smaller n increases standard error, widening the interval.
Wider confidence interval. Smaller n increases standard error, widening the interval.
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