Definition: One-tailed and two-tailed hypothesis
Index:
The Book of Statistical Proofs ▷
General Theorems ▷
Frequentist statistics ▷
Statistical hypotheses ▷
One-tailed vs. two-tailed
Sources:
Metadata: ID: D138 | shortcut: hyp-tail | author: JoramSoch | date: 2021-03-31, 09:21.
Definition: Let $H_0$ be a point null hypothesis
\[\label{eq:h0-point} H_0: \; \theta = \theta_0 \;\]and consider a set alternative hypothesis $H_1$. Then,
- $H_1$ is called a left-sided one-tailed hypothesis, if $\theta$ is assumed to be smaller than $\theta_0$:
- $H_1$ is called a right-sided one-tailed hypothesis, if $\theta$ is assumed to be larger than $\theta_0$:
- $H_1$ is called a two-tailed hypothesis, if $\theta$ is assumed to be unequal to $\theta_0$:
- Wikipedia (2021): "One- and two-tailed tests"; in: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, retrieved on 2021-03-31; URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-_and_two-tailed_tests.
Metadata: ID: D138 | shortcut: hyp-tail | author: JoramSoch | date: 2021-03-31, 09:21.