Across
- 4. the hypothesis that contains the inequality
- 8. the center of a confidence interval
- 10. what never is done to either hypothesis
- 12. the type of data that is represented by means
- 13. the function in the calculator for inference with proportions
- 14. what you do to the null hypothesis if the p-value is lower than the significance level
- 15. the distance from the center of the confidence interval to either end of the interval
- 18. the hypothesis that we contains the equality
Down
- 1. the type of data that is represented by proportions
- 2. the name of the value that is a z* or a t*
- 3. a value that refers to the population
- 5. the function in the calculator for inference with means
- 6. the name given to the sample standard deviation
- 7. the location of our sample
- 8. the chance of making a Type II error
- 9. a value that refers to the sample
- 11. the value that we compare the the significance level
- 16. the letter that symbolizes the significance level and is also the probability of a Type I Error
- 17. the area which indicates a sample that is too unlikely to have happened by chance alone
