What the use of P implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred. The Likelihood Principle - Seite 102von James O. Berger, Robert L. Wolpert - 1988 - 208 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| A. W. F. Edwards - 1984 - 266 Seiten
...surprise. As Jeffreys10 remarks : ' What the use of P implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred,' Fisher also invites us to reject the null hypothesis if P is near unity, and... | |
| James O. Berger - 1985 - 648 Seiten
...evaluation, observations that have not occurred. No one has phrased this better than Jeffreys (1961): "... a hypothesis which may be true may be rejected because...predicted observable results which have not occurred." Thus, in Example 15, the null hypothesis that 6 = 2 certainly would not predict that X would be larger... | |
| Donald A. Berry, Kathryn M. Chaloner, John K. Geweke - 1996 - 610 Seiten
...1961. p. 385) in his assessment of the underlying logic of significance tests: ". . .a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred." Differences in opinion regading the LP amount to differences over the appropriate... | |
| Graham B. McBride - 2005 - 344 Seiten
...(1961 164]) has characterized this as: "What the use of P implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred." have been given by Fleiss (1986 [96]), Frick (1995 [102]), Chow (1996 [47]),... | |
| Seymour Geisser, Wesley O. Johnson - 2006 - 192 Seiten
...made by Jeffreys (1961). He said What the use of the P implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred. Fisher (1956b) gave as an example of a pure test of significance the following... | |
| 2007 - 870 Seiten
...value is nearly always negligible. What the use of P implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred. This seems a remarkable procedure. As another example of null hypothesis, let... | |
| Steve Ziliak, Deirdre Nansen McCloskey - 2008 - 349 Seiten
...statistic] is nearly always negligible. What the use off implies, therefore, is that a hypothesis that may be true may be rejected because it has not predicted observable results that have not occurred. This seems a remarkable procedure. On the face of it the fact that such results... | |
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