Publication | Closed Access
Reconciling Bayesian and Frequentist Evidence in the One-Sided Testing Problem
415
Citations
11
References
1987
Year
Bayesian Posterior ProbabilityBayesian StatisticEngineeringBayesian InfimumStatistical FoundationVerificationCausal InferenceBayesian InferenceBayesian EvidenceFrequentist EvidenceTest DerivationBiostatisticsBayesian MethodsPublic HealthTestabilityStatisticsProbability TheoryBayesian StatisticsAutomated ReasoningSoftware TestingImprecise ProbabilityStatistical Inference
Abstract For the one-sided hypothesis testing problem it is shown that it is possible to reconcile Bayesian evidence against H 0, expressed in terms of the posterior probability that H 0 is true, with frequentist evidence against H 0, expressed in terms of the p value. In fact, for many classes of prior distributions it is shown that the infimum of the Bayesian posterior probability of H 0 is equal to the p value; in other cases the infimum is less than the p value. The results are in contrast to recent work of Berger and Sellke (1987) in the two-sided (point null) case, where it was found that the p value is much smaller than the Bayesian infimum. Some comments on the point null problem are also given.
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