Critical Region
Critical Region
The critical region is the region of values that corresponds to the rejection
of the null hypothesis at some chosen probability level. The shaded area
under the Student's t distribution curve is equal to the level of significance.
The critical values are tabulated and thus obtained from the Student's t
table or anther appropriate table. If the absolute value of the t statistic is
larger than the tabulated value, then t is in the critical region.
The statistical tests used will be one tailed or two tailed depending on the
nature of the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis.
H0 : µ = µ0 H1 : µ µ0;
1
One tail tests:
H0 : µ = µ0 H1 : µ < µ0;
H0 :µ = µ0 H1 : µ > µ0;
2
When we are interested only in the extreme values that are greater than or
less than a comparative value (µ0) we use a one tailed test to test for
significance. When we are interested in determining that things are
different or not equal, we use a two tailed.
3
Example 1:
A tire manufacturing plant produces 15.2 tires per hour. This yield has an
established variance of 2.5 ( =1.58 tires/hour). New machines are
recommended, but will be expensive to install. Before deciding to
implement the change, 12 new machines are tested. They produce 16.8 tire
per hour. Is it worth buying the new machines?
Before testing, verify that the data comes from a normal distribution
(assumption of the test)
1. Formulate hypotheses:
H0 : = 15.2
(ie. Mean yield of new machines is equal to 15.2 with a variance of 2.5)
H1 : > 15.2
(ie. Mean yield of new machines is greater than 15.2)
2. Choose
We choose = 0.10.
Here we must use the z statistic to test the null hypothesis since the
variance is known.
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4. Find the critical region:
The z-value obtained from Table 1 for z is 1.282. Hence, the critical region
for a one tailed test is: z > 1.282.
Assume (the yield) has a normal distribution with mean 15.2 and variance
equal to 2.5 (N(15.2, 2.5)). Then, z can be calculated as following:
1. Draw conclusion:
Since the calculated z = 3.51 > 1.282, we reject the H0 hypothesisthat the
mean yield from the new machines equals 15.2. The mean yield of the new
machine is greater than 15.2.
Example 2:
, .
5
1. H0 : = 690
That is 672.5 is not significantly different from 690
H1: 690
That is 672.5 is significantly different from 690
2. Choose = 0.01
3. Select statistic : test the H0 using the Student's t statistic.
4. Critical region (from Table 2, n=12-1=11):
|t| > t(.995)(11) = 3.106.
5. Compute the value of the test statistic:
6. Since the calculated |t|=1.38 < 3.106, the H0 that the new process does
not differ from the old process with respect to batch yields can not be
rejected. Conclude that the new process gives equal yields.
Example 3:
A drift test was run at San Angelo to compare Goodyear tires to competitor
tires on a Ford Escort. Is there a significant difference in the precision of
the results between suppliers?
Goodyear Competitor
No. of tests : 17 25
6
Assume the observations come from two normal distributions.
H0: = vs H1 :
2. Choose =0.10.
7. Since the calculated F value is smaller than the critical one (1.57 <
2.24), we accept H0 that the two population variances are equal. Thus,
assume that the supplier does not affect the precision.