GOF Tests
Homogeneity and Independence
Linear Regression
Means
Proportions
100

What is the purpose of a chi-squared goodness of fit test?

To determine whether an observed distribution fits an expected distribution.

100

What is the difference between homogeneity and independence tests?

Homogeneity compares distributions across multiple populations; independence checks the association between 2 variables in one population.

100

What does the slope represent in a linear regression model?

The change in the response variable for each one-unit increase in the explanatory variable. 

100

What test is used to compare one sample mean to a known value?

One-sample t-test.

100

What symbol represents a population proportion?

p

200
What type of variable is required for a chi-squared goodness-of-fit test?

One categorical variable.

200

How many categoricak variables are used in a chi-squared test of independence?

2 categorical variables

200

What is the null hypothesis in a linear regression significance test?

B=0

200

What distribution is used for mean tests when the population standard deviation is unknown?

t-distribution

200

When should you use a one-proportion z-test?

When comparing one sample proportion to a claimed population proportion.

300

What is the formula to calculate the chi-squared test statistic?

(Observed- expected)^2 / expected

300
What is the null hypothesis for a chi-squared test of independence?

The 2 variables are independent (no association)

300

What condition checks for a linear relationship between variables?

The relationship should be approximately linear.

300

What condition checks the shape of the population for small samples?

The population should be approximately normal.

300

What condition checks randomness in proportion tests?

The data must come from a random sample or randomized experiment.

400

What condition must be met for expected counts in a chi-squared test?

All expected counts should be at least 5.

400

How do you calculate an expected count in a 2 way table?

(Row Total * Column Total)/ Grand Total 

400

What does r^2 represent?

The proportion of variability in the response variable explained by the model. 

400

What is the null hypothesis for a two-sample t-test?

M1=M2

400

What is the null hypothesis for a two-proportion test?

p1=p2

500

In context, what does rejecting the null hypothesis mean for a goodness-of-fit test?

There is convincing evidence that the distribution differs from what was expected.

500

If the p-value is very small, what conclusion should be made?

Reject the null hypothesis; There is evidence of an association/no difference between the variables.

500

Why is it important to check residual plots?

To verify conditions such as linearity, constant variance, and independence.

500

What does a confidence interval for a mean difference that includes 0 imply?

There is no statistically significant difference between the 2 means.

500

Why do we combine proportions in a two-proportion z-test?

Because the null hypothesis assumes the two population proportions are equal.