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What is the Z critical value for 95% confidence?
The Z critical value for a 95% confidence interval is:
- 1.96 for a two-tailed test;
- 1.64 for a right-tailed test; and
- -1.64 for a left-tailed test.
How do I calculate Z critical value?
To find a Z critical value for a given confidence level α:
- Check if you perform a one- or two-tailed test.
- For a one-tailed test:
- Left-tailed: critical value is the
α-th quantile of the standard normal distribution N(0,1). - Right-tailed: critical value is the
(1-α)-th quantile.
- Left-tailed: critical value is the
- Two-tailed test: critical value equals
±(1-α/2)-th quantile of N(0,1). - No quantile tables? Use CDF tables! (The quantile function is the inverse of the CDF.)
- Verify your answer with an online critical value calculator.
What is a Z critical value?
A Z critical value is the value that defines the critical region in hypothesis testing when the test statistic follows the standard normal distribution. If the value of the test statistic falls into the critical region, you should reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative hypothesis.
Im so confused rn, I thought I understood this concept but it turns out not cause Im studying for the a stats test and one of the questions it says the critical value for a Confidence Interval of 80% is 1.28 and I don't understand why.
Their reasoning is 1 - .80 = .20, divded by two to get the area of the tails is .10, so then they add one of the tails (.10) to .80 which gets .90 and then they find that on the normal table which correlates to 1.28.
The way I have been doing is like this, 1 - .80= .20, and then divided by two is .10. So then I just need to find .10 in the normal table. Thats how they say to do it on youtube and it has been working for me up until now, I dont understand why they add .10 to .8 and why it doesnt say to do that in any video.
Can somebody pls help me understand it would be much appreciated, I have a test coming up and this is the only thing I cannot grasp .