[Steps Shown] An article in Marketing News, (T. T. Semon, "Consider a Statistical Insignificance Test," Marketing News , February 1, 1999) argued that the level
Question: An article in Marketing News, (T. T. Semon, "Consider a Statistical Insignificance Test," Marketing News , February 1, 1999) argued that the level of significance used when comparing two products is often too low – that is, sometimes you should be using an α value greater than 0.05. Specifically, the article recounted testing the proportion of potential customers with a preference for product 1 over product 2. The null hypothesis was that the population proportion of potential customers preferring product 1 was 0.50, and the alternative hypothesis was that it was not equal to 0.50. The p-value for the test was 0.22. The article suggested that, in some cases, this should be enough evidence to reject the null hypothesis.
- State the null and alternative hypothesis for this example.
- Explain the risks associated with Type I and Type II errors in this case.
- What would be the consequences if you rejected the null hypothesis for a p-value of 0.22?
- Why do you think the article suggested raising the value of α?
- What would you do in this situation?
- What is your answer in (e) if the p-value equals 0.12? What if it equals 0.06?
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