Huanfa Chen - huanfa.chen@ucl.ac.uk
19 August 2025
Module Lead | Contact |
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Prof. Adam Dennett Dr. Huanfa Chen Dr. Beatrice Taylor | a.dennett[at]ucl.ac.uk huanfa.chen[at]ucl.ac.uk. beatrice.taylor[at]ucl.ac.uk |
PGTAs | |
, , | Slack |
Looked at data analysis.
Research science is about coming up with hypotheses and evaluating them.
By the end of this lecture you should:
What we see in the news
Correct formulation:
If the coin is fair, how likely would it be to see 7 heads out of 10 flips OR AN EVEN MORE EXTREME RESULT?
Define the question
Null hypothesis – the status quo. The alternative hypothesis – need some evidence to verify.
Set you significance level
Identify the evidence
Calculate the p-value
Compare p-value with hypothesis level
Cyclists in London.
What makes a hypothesis good?
Hypothesis doesn’t come out of thin air
Lots of things can be correlated - but it doesn’t mean one event caused another.
Example from spurious correlations
You might not know whether events are correlated, or causing each other.
The point of the hypothesis test is to test your idea – but use your contextual understanding to come up with plausible (and ethical) initial questions
The process of coming up with a question, testing, iterating.
Tests can be one-tailed or two-tailed.
Assumes the data is normally distributed.
What is the probability of someone age 15 being a student on CASA007?
The probability is very small so we reject.
Is the gradient non-zero?
This indicates a correlation between the two variables.
…
This will be covered further in lecture X on linear regression.
Compares the mean of two distributions.
We’ve covered:
Practical will focus on establishing a evaluation a hypothesis.
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