Hypothesis testing is a statistical inference technique that uses a sample to give probabilistic conclusions on the underlying population.
In statistics, a hypothesis is a statement about population parameters. Typically we have two mutually exclusive hypotheses: one that is doubted, called the null hypothesis \( H_0 \); the other that is believed, called the alternative hypothesis \( H_1 \).
Hypothesis test is a rule that specifies for every possible sample whether to reject or (passively) accept the null. Theoretically, a hypothesis test divides the sample space into a rejection region and an acceptance region. In practice, we develop a test statistic as a real-valued function of the sample, and a rejection interval on the test statistic.
The p-value of a test statistic is the probability of observing a test statistic at least as deviant as the current value, if the null hypothesis is true. The significance level of the alternative hypothesis is a conventional upper bound on the p-value with which we claim the alternative is statistically significant.
A typical hypothesis testing procedure:
A working assumption is a statement used to construct scientific theories. Working assumptions cannot be logically false or logically true; it should be falsifiable and frequently examined. You start from an assumption that you believe is at least partially true, and results will confirm, reject or suggest modification to your assumption.
In contrast, a core assumption is a proposition that is either logically true or accepted as a fundamental principle for pragmatic use. Core assumptions are thus rarely examined.
The t-statistic under null \( H_0: \hat{\beta}_i = \beta^{*} \) is:
\[ t = \frac{\hat{\beta}_i - \beta^{*}}{\widehat{\text{s.e.}}(\hat{\beta}_i)} \]
F-statistic:
\[ F = \frac{\text{MSS} / p}{\text{RSS} / (n - p - 1)} \]
Analysis of variance is a collection of multivariate statistical methods originally used to analyze data obtained from (agricultural) experiments. The design of experiment affects the choice of analysis of variance method.
Analysis of variance as defined in Merriam-Webster:
analysis of variation in an experimental outcome and especially of a statistical variance in order to determine the contributions of given factors or variables to the variance. (First use: 1918)
structuring of parameters/effects into batches
ANOVA decomposes the variance (total sum of squares, TSS) into component sums of squares: factor sum of squares and residual sum of squares. ANOVA is closely related to regression analysis: recall that a fitted regression model split TSS into model sum of squares (MSS) and residual sum of squares (RSS). Indeed, it can be seen as a special case of generalized linear models: independent variables in analysis of variance become dummy variables for a regression model.
Multi-factor ANOVA is used to detect significant factors in a multi-factor model.
The ANOVA table is a standard report of an analysis of variance, which provides sum of squares and also a formal F-test for the factor effect. One-way ANOVA is an omnibus test that determines for several independent groups whether any of their group means are statistically significantly different from each other. The one-way ANOVA F-test is a generalization of the two-sample t-test, which are identical (in particular, \(F = t^2\)) when there are only two groups. As an omnibus test, ANOVA does not have the problem of increased Type I error probability in multiple t-tests.
Three main assumptions of ANOVA test:
Non-parametric alternative: Kruskal-Wallis H-test.
To determine which specific groups differ from one another, you need to use a post hoc test:
Factor is a categorical/discrete variable; level is a possible value of a factor. A contrast is a linear combination of factor level means whose coefficients sum to zero. Two contrasts are orthogonal if these coefficients are orthogonal. Simple contrast is the difference between two factor means.
multiple comparison, a more formal analysis for comparing individual batch means.
Fixed effects and random effects have many incompatible definitions, but it is better to keep the terminology simple and unambiguous. An effect/coefficient in a multilevel model is constant ("fixed effect") if it is identical for all groups in a population; varying ("random effect") if it is allowed to differ from group to group. {Gelman:2005. Annals of Statistics.}
Def: likelihood ratio statistic
Def: likelihood ratio test
Def: Nuisance parameter
Def: Type I Error, Type II Error
Def: power function
Def: size
Def: level
Def: unbiased
Def: uniformly most powerful (UMP) test
Thm: (Neyman-Pearson)
Def: monotone likelihood ratio (MLR)
Thm: (Karlin-Rubin)
Wald, LM, LR, J