mathhh10670
New member
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2020
- Messages
- 6
If you create a 95% confidence interval for the mean of one thing (call this x), and want to compare if there is a difference between the mean of x and another thing (call this y), if the mean value of y is not in the confidence interval of x, is it then suffice to say that there is a difference in the means? The mean of y lies over 1000 values outside the lower end of the confidence interval of x.
My guess is that it is suffice to say there is a difference. Because the mean of x is likely to lie in that confidence interval, if the mean of y isn't in it, then there is likely a difference. But since it is not 100% confidence, I am not sure if this is correct to say, as the mean of x could in fact be outside the confidence interval.
My guess is that it is suffice to say there is a difference. Because the mean of x is likely to lie in that confidence interval, if the mean of y isn't in it, then there is likely a difference. But since it is not 100% confidence, I am not sure if this is correct to say, as the mean of x could in fact be outside the confidence interval.