CRIM 320 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Type I And Type Ii Errors, Null Hypothesis, Alternative Hypothesis

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Violation of these assumptions requires the use of alternative tests. Makes no distributional assumptions in the population. Requirements for chi-square: nominal or small category ordinal variables, two or more independent samples, expected cell counts should not be small (i. e. , less than 5), random sampling. Null hypothesis two variables are independent. If we reject the null, we are stating that the two variables are dependent. Reject the null if the observed counts are sufficiently different from the expected counts. Data taken from table 2 in tishler et al. article. Row total x column total / grand total. Note that you do this for each cell. These are the numbers that we expect if the two variables are independent of each other. In each cell, subtract expected count from observed count. The number of observations that are free rather than fixed. : the last observation in each row and column is predetermined. Expected cell counts must be greater than 5.

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