Sign In

8.4 : Choosing Between z and t Distribution

The z and the Student t distribution estimate the population mean using the sample mean and standard deviation. However, to decide which distribution to use for a calculation, one needs to determine the sample size, the nature of the distribution, and whether the population standard deviation is known. If the population standard deviation is known and the population is normally distributed, or if the sample size is greater than 30, the z distribution is preferred. The Student t distribution is preferred when the population standard deviation is unknown, and the population is normally distributed; or if the sample size exceeds 30.

It is important to note that for a sample with a size less than 30, drawn from a skewed or unknown distribution, neither the z nor t distribution can be used. Therefore, z and t distributions cannot accurately estimate the population mean for samples drawn from voluntary responses, convenience sampling, or skewed or unknown population distributions. One must employ nonparametric statistical methods such as bootstrapping for categorical data or when the sample size is small, i.e., less than 30.

Tags
Z DistributionStudent T DistributionPopulation MeanSample SizeStandard DeviationNormal DistributionNonparametric MethodsBootstrappingSkewed DistributionSample Mean

From Chapter 8:

article

Now Playing

8.4 : Choosing Between z and t Distribution

Distributions

2.5K Views

article

8.1 : Distributions to Estimate Population Parameter

Distributions

3.4K Views

article

8.2 : Degrees of Freedom

Distributions

2.7K Views

article

8.3 : Student t Distribution

Distributions

5.3K Views

article

8.5 : Chi-square Distribution

Distributions

3.0K Views

article

8.6 : Finding Critical Values for Chi-Square

Distributions

2.7K Views

article

8.7 : Estimating Population Standard Deviation

Distributions

2.8K Views

article

8.8 : Goodness-of-Fit Test

Distributions

3.1K Views

article

8.9 : Expected Frequencies in Goodness-of-Fit Tests

Distributions

2.4K Views

article

8.10 : Contingency Table

Distributions

2.3K Views

article

8.11 : Introduction to Test of Independence

Distributions

2.0K Views

article

8.12 : Hypothesis Test for Test of Independence

Distributions

3.2K Views

article

8.13 : Determination of Expected Frequency

Distributions

2.0K Views

article

8.14 : Test for Homogeneity

Distributions

1.9K Views

article

8.15 : F Distribution

Distributions

3.4K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved