webMATH236 Lecture6
webMATH236 Lecture6
for Engineers
Seventh Edition
Douglas C. Montgomery George C. Runger
Chapter 9
Tests of Hypotheses for a Single Sample
Tests of Hypotheses: General
Concepts
Definition
• A hypothesis is a claim
(assumption) about a
population parameter:
– population mean
H0 : μ 3 H0 : X 3
The Null Hypothesis, H0
(continued)
Claim: the
population
mean age is 50.
(Null Hypothesis:
Population
H0: μ = 50 )
Now select a
random
Is X=20 likely if μ = 50? sample
Sampling Distribution of
X
X
20 μ = 50
If H0 is true
If it is unlikely ... then we
that we would reject the null
get a sample ... if in fact this were hypothesis
mean of this the population that μ = 50.
value ... mean…
Level of Significance,
• Type I Error
– Reject a true null hypothesis
– Considered a serious type of error
• Type II Error
– Fail to reject a false null hypothesis
Actual Situation
Decision H0 True H0 False
Do Not
No Error Type II Error
Key: Reject
(1 - a ) (β)
Outcome H0
(Probability) Reject Type I Error No Error
H0 (a) (1-β)
Type I & II Error Relationship
– β when
– β when σ
– β when n
Power of the Test
• The power of a test is the probability of
rejecting a null hypothesis that is false
Critical xc
value
Lower-Tail Tests
H0: μ ≥ 3
There is only one
critical value, since H1: μ < 3
the rejection area
is in only one tail a
μ x
Critical xc
value
Two-Tail Tests
/2 /2
There are two
critical values, x
3
defining the
Reject H0 Do not reject H0 Reject H0
two regions of
-z/2 0 +z/2 z
rejection
Lower Upper
critical critical value
value
Hypothesis Testing Example
Test the claim that the true mean # of TV
sets in US homes is equal to 3.
(Assume σ = 0.8)
State the appropriate null and alternative
hypotheses
H : μ = 3 , H : μ ≠ 3 (This is a two tailed test)
0 1
Specify the desired level of significance
Suppose that = .05 is chosen for this test
.0228 .0228
P(z 2.0) .0228
p-value
= .0228 + .0228 = .0456 -1.96 0 1.96 Z
-2.0 2.0
Example: p-Value
• Compare the p-value with
– If p-value < , reject H0
– If p-value , do not reject H0
• A close relationship exists between the test of a hypothesis for , and the confidence interval
for .
• If is a confidence interval for the parameter , the test of size of the hypothesis
Hypothesis
Tests for
Known Unknown
Test of Hypothesis
for the Mean (σ Known)
• Convert sample result ( x ) to a z value
Hypothesis
Tests for
σ Known σ Unknown
H0: μ = μ0
x μ0
Reject H0 if z zα H1: μ > μ0
σ
n
Alternate rule:
Reject H 0 if x μ 0 Z α σ/ n a
Critical xc
p-Value Approach to Testing
• Convert sample result (e.g., x ) to test statistic (e.g., z statistic )
• Obtain the p-value
– For an upper
x - μ0
tail test: p - value P(z , given that H0 is true)
σ/ n
x - μ0
P(z | μ μ0 )
σ/ n
• Decision rule: compare the p-value to
= .10
x μ0
Reject H0 if z 1.28
σ/ n
Example: Sample Results
= .10
σ Known σ Unknown
x μ0 x μ0
Reject H0 if t t n-1, α/2 or if t t n-1, α/2
s s
n n
Example: Two-Tail Test
( Unknown)
The average cost of a hotel room
in Chicago is said to be $168 per
night. A random sample of 25
hotels resulted in x = $172.50
and s = $15.40.
Test this claim at the = 0.05
level. H0: μ =
(Assume the population distribution is normal)
168 H1: μ
¹ 168
Example Solution:
Two-Tail Test
t24 , .025 = ± 2.0639 Do not reject H0: not sufficient evidence that
true mean cost is different than $168
One Sample: Test on a Single
Proportion
Tests for a Population
Proportion
• Our hypothesis test is similar to the one we saw
before. But now we have a sample that consists
of successes and failures, with “success”
indicating a defective wafer.
• If the population proportion of defective wafers is
denoted by p, the supplier’s claim is that p 0.1.
• Since our hypothesis concerns a population
proportion, it is natural to base the test on the
sample proportion.
Hypothesis Test
• Let X be the number of successes in n
independent Bernoulli trials, each with success
probability p; in other words, let X ~ Bin(n, p).
• To test a null hypothesis of the form H0: p p0,
H0: p ≥ p0, or H0: p = p0, assuming that both
np0 and n(1- p0) are greater than 10:
• Compute the z-score: pˆ p
0
z .
p 0 (1 p 0 ) / n
P-value for the Hypothesis Test
• An automated filling machine is used to fill bottles with liquid detergent. A random sample of 20 bottles
results in a sample variance of fill volume of s2 = 0.0153 (fluid ounces)2. If the variance of fill volume
exceeds 0.01 (fluid ounces)2, an unacceptable proportion of bottles will be underfilled or overfilled. Is there
evidence in the sample data to suggest that the manufacturer has a problem with underfilled or overfilled
bottles? Use = 0.05, and assume that fill volume has a normal distribution.
• Using the seven-step procedure results in the following:
Example 9.8| Automated Filling
• An automated filling machine is used to fill bottles with liquid detergent. A random sample of 20 bottles
results in a sample variance of fill volume of s2 = 0.0153 (fluid ounces)2. If the variance of fill volume
exceeds 0.01 (fluid ounces)2, an unacceptable proportion of bottles will be underfilled or overfilled. Is there
evidence in the sample data to suggest that the manufacturer has a problem with underfilled or overfilled
bottles? Use = 0.05, and assume that fill volume has a normal distribution.
• Using the seven-step procedure results in the following: