Dhananjay Mudras
Roll no - 10
Group 2
Null Hypothesis
Roll no - 10
Group 2
Null Hypothesis
Definition
A type of hypothesis used in statistics that
proposes that no statistical significance exists in a set of given
observations. The null hypothesis attempts to show that no variation exists
between variables, or that a single variable is no different than zero. It is
presumed to be true until statistical evidence nullifies it for an alternative
hypothesis.
The null hypothesis assumes that any kind of
difference or significance you see in a set of data is due to chance.
Critical Value Test
The critical value(s) for a hypothesis test is a
threshold to which the value of the test statistic in a sample is compared to
determine whether or not the null hypothesis is rejected.
In statistics, a critical value is the value
corresponding to a given significance level. This cutoff value determines the
boundary between those samples resulting in a test statistic that leads to
rejecting the null hypothesis and those that lead to a decision not to reject
the null hypothesis. If the calculated value from the statistical test is less
than the critical value, then you fail to reject the null hypothesis. If the
calculated statistic is outside of the critical value, then you reject the null
hypothesis and are forced to accept the alternate hypothesis
The critical value for any hypothesis test depends
on the significance level at which the test is carried out, and whether the
test is one-sided or two-sided.
Business
Apllication
A person sees that his investment strategy produces
higher average returns than simply buying and holding a stock. The null
hypothesis claims that there is no difference between the two average returns,
and the person has to believe this until he proves otherwise. Refuting the null
hypothesis would require showing statistical significance, which can be found
using a variety of tests. If the person conducts one of these tests and proves
that the difference between his returns and the buy-and-hold returns is significant,
he can then refute the null hypothesis.
Sources:
http://www.stats.gla.ac.uk/steps/glossary/hypothesis_testing.html#h0
