The binomial distribution is a discrete probability distribution. The conditions for a binomial distribution are:
A variable
For a given
A binomial distribution
This holds for sufficiently large
A hypothesis test is used to determine whether the value of a population parameter, such as the population mean or standard deviation, has changed from an assumed one.
When hypothesis testing the binomial distribution, the parameter being tested is the probability or proportion of success,
Alternatively, the critical region can be used. The critical region is the set of values of the test statistic that should lead to rejecting the null hypothesis, bounded by the critical values. The other values form the acceptance region.
The actual significance level is the probability of incorrectly rejecting the null hypothesis, It is the probability of being in the critical region, and is always
The normal distribution is a continuous probability distribution that models many real-world situations. A variable
The following facts about the normal distribution are expected (IS):
The Z-score is the number of standard deviations above the mean that a value
The Z-score can be used to find unknown means or standard deviations.
The sample mean, denoted
The variance is divided by
When hypothesis testing the normal distribution, the parameter being tested is the population mean,
When testing whether there is correlation between two variables, the parameter being tested is the population correlation coefficient,