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- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/American_River_College/STAT_300%3A_My_Introductory_Statistics_Textbook_(Mirzaagha)/08%3A_Finding_Confidence_Interval_for_Population_Mean_and_Proportion/8.02%3A_Inference_for_Categorical_Data/8.2.06%3A_Randomization_Test_(Special_Topic)We suppose the null distribution of the sample difference follows a normal distribution with mean 0 (the null value) and a standard deviation equal to the standard error of the estimate.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/American_River_College/STAT_300%3A_My_Introductory_Statistics_Textbook_(Mirzaagha)/09%3A_Hypothesis_Testing_about_Population_Mean_and_Proportion/9.02%3A_Inference_for_Categorical_Data/9.2.06%3A_Randomization_Test_(Special_Topic)We suppose the null distribution of the sample difference follows a normal distribution with mean 0 (the null value) and a standard deviation equal to the standard error of the estimate.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Rio_Hondo_College/PSY_190%3A_Statistics_for_the_Behavioral_Sciences/04%3A_Basic_Concepts_of_Probability/4.01%3A_Sample_Spaces_Events_and_Their_ProbabilitiesThe sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a nu...The sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a number between 0 and 1. The probabilities of all the outcomes add up to 1. The probability of any event A is the sum of the probabilities of the outcomes in A.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_Statistics/OpenIntro_Statistics_(Diez_et_al)./06%3A_Inference_for_Categorical_Data/6.06%3A_Randomization_Test_(Special_Topic)We suppose the null distribution of the sample difference follows a normal distribution with mean 0 (the null value) and a standard deviation equal to the standard error of the estimate.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_Statistics/Introductory_Statistics_(Shafer_and_Zhang)/03%3A_Basic_Concepts_of_Probability/3.01%3A_Sample_Spaces_Events_and_Their_ProbabilitiesThe sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a nu...The sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a number between 0 and 1. The probabilities of all the outcomes add up to 1. The probability of any event A is the sum of the probabilities of the outcomes in A.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Queensborough_Community_College/MA336%3A_Statistics/05%3A_Basic_Concepts_of_Probability/5.01%3A_Sample_Spaces_Events_and_Their_ProbabilitiesThe sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a nu...The sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space. The probability of any outcome is a number between 0 and 1. The probabilities of all the outcomes add up to 1. The probability of any event A is the sum of the probabilities of the outcomes in A.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Probability_Theory/Probability_Mathematical_Statistics_and_Stochastic_Processes_(Siegrist)/02%3A_Probability_Spaces/2.01%3A_Random_ExperimentsFrom the point of view of probability, the important fact is that a playing card encodes a number of properties or attributes on the front of the card that are hidden on the back of the card. (Later i...From the point of view of probability, the important fact is that a playing card encodes a number of properties or attributes on the front of the card that are hidden on the back of the card. (Later in this chapter, these properties will become random variables.) In particular, a standard card deck can be modeled by the Cartesian product set \[ D = \{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, j, q, k \} \times \{\clubsuit, \diamondsuit, \heartsuit, \spadesuit \} \] where the first coordinate encodes the de…
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/American_River_College/STAT_300%3A_My_Introductory_Statistics_Textbook_(Mirzaagha)/11%3A_Hypothesis_Testing_about_Goodness_of_Fit_(Multinomial)/11.01%3A_Inference_for_Categorical_Data/11.1.06%3A_Randomization_Test_(Special_Topic)We suppose the null distribution of the sample difference follows a normal distribution with mean 0 (the null value) and a standard deviation equal to the standard error of the estimate.
- https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/American_River_College/STAT_300%3A_My_Introductory_Statistics_Textbook_(Mirzaagha)/10%3A_Hypothesis_Testing_about_Two_Population_Means_and_Proportions/10.01%3A_Inference_for_Categorical_Data/10.1.06%3A_Randomization_Test_(Special_Topic)We suppose the null distribution of the sample difference follows a normal distribution with mean 0 (the null value) and a standard deviation equal to the standard error of the estimate.