Biostatistics Flashcards

1
Q

Point estimate

A

Single numbers derived from a sample

- represents our best estimate of the true value of the much larger population parameter

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2
Q

What are examples of point estimates derived from samples of populations?

A
  • mean
  • proportion
  • OR
  • relative risk
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3
Q

Sampling

A

Measure only a fraction of individuals in the population of diverse individuals

  • may or may not reflect the population
  • sample mean value may not be the exact mean value of the population
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4
Q

Sampling leads to ______

A

Error

  • the more you sample, the less your error
  • on any one sample, you do not know how far away from the true mean you are
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5
Q

Confidence interval

A

Range of values that the point estimate could reasonably take
- always accompanied by a probability statement

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6
Q

95% confidence interval

A

If we repeated sampling of the population many times, and for each sample constructed a 95% confidence interval, then 95% of these intervals would contain the true population parameter

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7
Q

You assume that the samples are ______

A

Independent, randomly selected (no bias), and sufficiently large

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8
Q

Common CI inference

A

The 95% CI contains the population parameter 95% of the time
- applies for means, proportions, RR, OR

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9
Q

P value

A

Probability of obtaining the observed value (or more extreme value) when the null hypothesis (Ho) is true

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10
Q

Ho

A

States there is no difference between the groups being compared
- the groups being compared came from one population, and the difference you see is only sampling error (aka: random error)

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11
Q

If the p-value is small, then ______

A

The probability of obtaining the observed (or more extreme) value is small, under the assumption of Ho

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12
Q

What is “small”

A

Usually 0.05 or below

  • if the p value is small, we can reject Ho
  • if the p value is not small, we cannot reject Ho
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13
Q

If we reject Ho ______

A

You can accept the alternative hypothesis (Ha)

  • states that there is some difference between groups or with a fixed value
  • say that the 2 groups are probably not from one population but from distinct populations
  • statistically different
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14
Q

With the null hypothesis, the 2 groups really are ______

A

From one population

- the difference that is seen is due to sampling error

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15
Q

If the p value is small, then the probability of getting the observed (or more extreme) value, due to sampling error, is _____

A

Small

- reject Ho, accept that there is some difference between groups (they come from separate populations)

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16
Q

If the p value is not small then we cannot reject Ho because ______

A

There is not sufficient evidence to reject it