Lecture 9 Hypothesis Testing
Lecture 9 Hypothesis Testing
True State
H0 True Correct Type I Error
Decision
H0 False Type II Error Correct
Decision
As another example, suppose a company has held an 18% share of the market. However, because of an increased
marketing effort, company officials believe the company’s market share is now greater than 18%, and the officials
would like to prove it.
Two-sided Alternative Hypothesis
One-tailed tests are always directional, and the alternative hypothesis uses either the greater than or the less than sign. A
one-tailed test should only be used when the researcher knows for certain that the outcome of an experiment is going to
occur only in one direction or the researcher is only interested in one direction of the experiment as in the case of the
market share problem. In one-tailed problems, the researcher is trying to “prove” that something is older, younger, higher,
lower, more, less, greater, and so on.
REJECTION AND NON_REJECTION REGION
Legally, if the courts make it harder to send innocent people to jail, then they have made it easier to let
guilty people go free. One way to reduce both errors is to increase the sample size. If a larger sample is
taken, it is more likely that the sample is representative of the population, which translates into a better
chance that a business researcher will make the correct choice.
Hypothesis Testing Steps
■ Step 1. Establish a null and alternative hypothesis.
■ Step 2. Determine the appropriate statistical test.
■ Step 3. Set the value of alpha, the Type I error rate.
■ Step 4. Establish the decision rule.
■ Step 5. Gather sample data.
■ Step 6. Analyze the data.
■ Step 7. Reach a statistical conclusion.
■ Step 8. Make a business decision
A survey of (Certified Public Accountant) CPAs across the United States found that the average net income for sole proprietor
CPAs is $74,914. Because this survey is now more than ten years old, an accounting researcher wants to test this figure by
taking a random sample of 112 sole proprietor accountants in the United States to determine whether the net income figure
changed. The researcher could use the eight steps of hypothesis testing to do so. Assume the population standard deviation
of net incomes for sole proprietor CPAs is $14,530.
TEST:
Step 2 is to determine the appropriate statistical test and sampling distribution. Because the population standard
deviation is known ($14,530) and the researcher is using the sample mean as the statistic, the z test
Step 3 is to specify the Type I error rate, or alpha, which is .05 in this problem
Step 4: is to state the decision rule. Because the test is two tailed and alpha is .05, there is alpha/2
or .025 area in each of the tails of the distribution.
BUSINESS IMPLICATION:
Step 8 is to make a managerial decision.
Managerially, this statistical finding may mean that CPAs will be more expensive to hire either as
full-time employees or as consultants. It may mean that consulting services have gone up in price.
For new accountants, it may mean the potential for greater earning power.
CLASS HEIGHTS
• Hypothesis Ho: mean=165cm
H1: mean ≠ 165 cm
Sample of 5 students
X bar= 168
Alpha=0.05
Z alpha=1.96
Class height standard deviation = 5 cm
168-165/(5/sqrt(5) = 1.34
We find that the probability of randomly obtaining a z value this great or greater by chance is .5000 - .4793 = .0207. The p-
value is .0207. Using this information, the researcher would reject the null hypothesis for alpha = .05 or .10 or any value
more than .0207. The researcher would not reject the null hypothesis for any alpha value less than or equal to .0207 (in
particular, = .01, .001, etc.).
Using the Critical Value Method to Test Hypotheses
Another method of testing hypotheses is the critical value method. In the CPA income example, the
null hypothesis was rejected because the computed value of z was in the rejection zone. What mean
income would it take to cause the observed z value to be in the rejection zone? The critical value
method determines the critical mean value required for z to be in the rejection region and uses it to
test the hypotheses.
With the critical value method, most of the computational work is done ahead of time.
In this problem, before the sample means are computed, the analyst knows that a
sample mean value of greater than $77,605 or less than $72,223 must be attained to
reject the hypothesized population mean. Because the sample mean for this problem
was $78,695, which is greater than $77,605, the analyst rejects the null hypothesis.
This method is particularly attractive in industrial settings where standards can be set
ahead of time and then quality control technicians can gather data and compare actual
measurements of products to specifications.
In an attempt to determine why customer service is important to managers in the United Kingdom, researchers
surveyed managing directors of manufacturing plants in Scotland. One of the reasons proposed was that customer
service is a means of retaining customers. On a scale from 1 to 5, with 1 being low and 5 being high, the survey
respondents rated this reason more highly than any of the others, with a mean
response of 4.30. Suppose U.S. researchers believe American manufacturing managers
would not rate this reason as highly and conduct a hypothesis test to prove their theory.
Alpha is set at .05. Data are gathered and the following results are obtained. Use these
data and the eight steps of hypothesis testing to determine whether U.S. managers rate
this reason significantly lower than the 4.30 mean ascertained in the United Kingdom.
Assume from previous studies that the population standard deviation is 0.574.
4. State the decision rule. Because this test is a one-
STEP
ACTION:
STEP 7. State the statistical conclusion. Because the observed test statistic is not less than the critical
value and is not in the rejection region, the statistical conclusion is that the null hypothesis cannot be
rejected.
8. Make a managerial decision. The test does not result in enough evidence to conclude that U.S.
STEP
managers think it is less important to use customer service as a means of retaining customers than
do UK managers. Customer service is an important tool for retaining customers in both countries
according to managers.
USING CRITICAL VALUE METHOD
TESTING HYPOTHESIS ABOUT A POPULATION
USING t statistic
• The U.S. Farmers’ Production Company builds large harvesters. For a harvester to be properly
balanced when operating, a 25-pound plate is installed on its side. The machine that produces
these plates is set to yield plates that average 25 pounds. The distribution of plates produced from
the machine is normal. However, the shop supervisor is worried that the machine is out of
adjustment and is producing plates that do not average 25 pounds. To test this concern, he
randomly selects 20 of the plates produced the day before and weighs them.