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I would say C, avoiding Type I errors. If they are assuming innocence and trying to prove guilt, then H0: individual innocent; Ha: individual guilty.sks2013 wrote:
Can you explain please …..
A goal of an innocent until proven guilty justice system is to place a higher priority on:
A)
avoiding type II errors.
B)
the null hypothesis.
C)
avoiding type I errors.
But that depends on the threshold of proof, not on the null hypothesis.tickersu wrote:
I would say C, avoiding Type I errors. If they are assuming innocence and trying to prove guilt, then H0: individual innocent; Ha: individual guilty.sks2013 wrote:Can you explain please …..
A goal of an innocent until proven guilty justice system is to place a higher priority on:
A)
avoiding type II errors.
B)
the null hypothesis.
C)
avoiding type I errors.
If they don’t want to wrongly accuse someone, they would prefer to minimize the probability of calling someone guilty when, in truth, he or she is innocent [rejecting H0 when H0 is true (Type I error)].
Sorry, I was a little distracted, but good catch. Also, I know it would depend on the threshold of proof (I agree a pretty crummy question), but I thought of what the author was (probably) trying to test.S2000magician wrote:
But that depends on the threshold of proof, not on the null hypothesis.tickersu wrote:
I would say C, avoiding Type I errors. If they are assuming innocence and trying to prove guilt, then H0: individual innocent; Ha: individual guilty.sks2013 wrote:Can you explain please …..
A goal of an innocent until proven guilty justice system is to place a higher priority on:
A)
avoiding type II errors.
B)
the null hypothesis.
C)
avoiding type I errors.
If they don’t want to wrongly accuse someone, they would prefer to minimize the probability of calling someone guilty when, in truth, he or she is innocent [rejecting H0 when H0 is true (Type I error)].
(Oh, and I believe that what they don’t want to do wrongly is convict someone, not merely accuse someone.)
As did I. And we’re probably correct, but it’s an awful question.tickersu wrote:… I thought of what the author was (probably) trying to test.
I agree, and unfortunately, there is a lot of incorrect or misleading “authoritative” information published for people to “learn” from. Another issue is that too many people miss their mark when they try to write tricky questions (professors, textbook writers, prep providers). I just think content providers have to produce thousands of questions and so, a few bad questions like this pop up.S2000magician wrote:
As did I. And we’re probably correct, but it’s an awful question.tickersu wrote:… I thought of what the author was (probably) trying to test.
People who read that question and its explanation (that would provide a good giggle), will mistakenly think that how you choose your null hypothesis has some bearing on what type of error you’re trying to avoid, which is absurd. So they’ll have a poorer understanding of how hypothesis testing really works than they did before the question.
Grrrrr.
Which prep provider did that question come from? In addition, I would recommend looking at Khan Academy (free videos) to see if they are helpful for you to understand hypothesis testing better; S2000 has a website as well. Lastly, I would recommend using a legitimate statistics textbook if you want further clarification/practice.sks2013 wrote:
thank you very much all. all these questions are really making me confused & also i am becoming uncomfortable with hypothesis.thanks
You’re quite welcome.sks2013 wrote:thank you very much all.
I’ve been working on a series of articles on hypothesis testing, but it’s not quite complete yet. Ask me at the end of January.sks2013 wrote:all these questions are really making me confused & also i am becoming uncomfortable with hypothesis.thanks
thank you very much….tickersu wrote:
Which prep provider did that question come from? In addition, I would recommend looking at Khan Academy (free videos) to see if they are helpful for you to understand hypothesis testing better; S2000 has a website as well. Lastly, I would recommend using a legitimate statistics textbook if you want further clarification/practice.sks2013 wrote:
thank you very much all. all these questions are really making me confused & also i am becoming uncomfortable with hypothesis.thanks
Here is a link to Khan (in case you want to check it out)… https://www.khanacademy.org/math/probability/statistics-inferential
sure & thanksS2000magician wrote:
You’re quite welcome.sks2013 wrote:thank you very much all.
I’ve been working on a series of articles on hypothesis testing, but it’s not quite complete yet. Ask me at the end of January.sks2013 wrote:all these questions are really making me confused & also i am becoming uncomfortable with hypothesis.thanks
Glad to help!sks2013 wrote:
thank you very much….tickersu wrote:
Which prep provider did that question come from? In addition, I would recommend looking at Khan Academy (free videos) to see if they are helpful for you to understand hypothesis testing better; S2000 has a website as well. Lastly, I would recommend using a legitimate statistics textbook if you want further clarification/practice.sks2013 wrote:
thank you very much all. all these questions are really making me confused & also i am becoming uncomfortable with hypothesis.thanks
Here is a link to Khan (in case you want to check it out)… https://www.khanacademy.org/math/probability/statistics-inferential