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Section 11.1 Making a guess

When creating confidence intervals, you started with a sample and used the sample statistic (sample mean, relative frequency, sample variance, etc.) to anchor an interval which (with high possibility) contains the corresponding population statistic \(\mu, p, \sigma^2\text{,}\) etc. In this section, we instead start with an educated guess for one of the population statistics \(\mu, p, \sigma^2\) and then statistically compare that value with the subsequently collected sample statistic.
The educated guess noted above is often called the "null hypothesis" and should be considered as a guess that one tries to disprove if possible by using a subsequent statistical sample.