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| | Introduction to Hypothesis Testing |
 | | 1055, 1052, 1051, 1052, 1055, 1054, 1053, 1053, 1053, 1052, 1053, 1052, 1051, 1052, 1050, 1052, 1051, 1050, 1050, 1050, 1050, 1046. |
 | | Since we observed the event { X.bar > = 1051.68 }, we would conclude that we have very strong evidence to indicate that the expected number of male births exceeds 1041 per 1000 female births, since this event could only happen by chance less than.05% of the time otherwise (almost never). |
 | | Since we observed the event { X.bar > = 1051.68 }, we would conclude that we have relatively weak evidence to indicate that the expected number of male births exceeds 1051 per 1000 female births, since this event could happen by chance around 5-10% of the time otherwise. |
| io.uwinnipeg.ca /~zhao/TEACHING/1501/HT.html (710 words) |
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