The tutorial collection is really good! It covers concepts that need hours of continuous lectures in college in a much simpler way. Thank you for the knowledge.
hello Dr Nic, i'm very new into your channel, and I just noticed that some of your videos are like 9 years old, but I am very grateful that you are still uploading a lot of knowledges... I want to say thank you for helping all of us to learn statistics. i'm now in an early year of engineering college which is non Math/Statistics major. But i suddenly have interests in AI and Machine Learning, which are out of my faculty scope of curriculum. So i started to self-learn from books, internets, and luckily i found your channel. 😁 (i mean why didn't I find your channel like years ago 😭) I hope i can always enjoy every knowledge from now on, and can build a strong math and statistics fundamentals through your Channel, so I can pursue in AI/ML career. Thank you very much Dr Nic! 😊🙏
Thanks Daniel - I hope you continue to learn. Isn't TH-cam wonderful for helping us to learn things of all sorts. It taught me to crochet. Infinitely patient and repeatable - unlike many people.
My favorite scene from any if your videos was when you said “In general,” and had a picture of Napoleon (I think). Also, when the question was “Male or Female” and the researcher was yelling at the subject “Make your choice!”
I know. My son used to edit my videos, or put a final funny touch on them and he has a real talent for it. He makes me laugh out loud at my own videos. I'm not as funny, though I do try to keep a light touch. I'm hoping my clear explanations will keep people coming back.
So, it means we can reject the null hypothesis if the p is 0.02? Also, thank you a lot Dr.Nic, you made Statistics more enjoyable for me! Edit: I cannot access the web content anymore and it said 404 web page not found. Could you kindly check that as well?
Hi Abdallah You are most welcome to use any or all of the videos in your teaching. You can see them all described on our website: creativemaths.net/videos/ If you would like to support my endeavours you could become a channel member. This also gives you access to some more videos: th-cam.com/channels/G32MfGLit1pcqCRXyy9cAg.htmljoin Best wishes Nic
This is not something I've heard of. For sample standard deviation you use n-1 in the denominator as opposed to the population standard deviation. But for the standard error, it is customary to use s/sqrt n. Perhaps you or the book have those two calculations confused?
@@DrNic Ah, maybe it was me who got confused. May I check with you: Now after we calculate the sum of squares for the sample, we divide it by by (n-1) instead of by n? (and then take its square to get sample standard deviation) May I ask one more question, please: In this example, do we have to know that the population follows a normal distribution to use the t test, especially when the sample size is small?
Thanks so much. You saved my statistics course. I found it really better than our lecturer at Imperial. Now I can't believe I paid 30,000 to them.
Great to hear! Feel free to contribute to my channel at a more modest $5 a month. th-cam.com/channels/G32MfGLit1pcqCRXyy9cAg.htmljoin
The tutorial collection is really good! It covers concepts that need hours of continuous lectures in college in a much simpler way. Thank you for the knowledge.
You're very welcome! I taught at university for many years and have drawn on my experience there to make the videos. I'm glad they are helping.
Very very very Good for you! you open a very difficult lock from my mind by this video. Thanks a million! God save you and bless you!
Glad it helped
Thank you so much for this content, you are a saviour!
Happy to help!
love you and the way you make it easy for us to understand
Thanks - it's a fun challenge.
hello Dr Nic, i'm very new into your channel, and I just noticed that some of your videos are like 9 years old, but I am very grateful that you are still uploading a lot of knowledges... I want to say thank you for helping all of us to learn statistics.
i'm now in an early year of engineering college which is non Math/Statistics major. But i suddenly have interests in AI and Machine Learning, which are out of my faculty scope of curriculum. So i started to self-learn from books, internets, and luckily i found your channel. 😁 (i mean why didn't I find your channel like years ago 😭)
I hope i can always enjoy every knowledge from now on, and can build a strong math and statistics fundamentals through your Channel, so I can pursue in AI/ML career. Thank you very much Dr Nic! 😊🙏
Thanks Daniel - I hope you continue to learn. Isn't TH-cam wonderful for helping us to learn things of all sorts. It taught me to crochet. Infinitely patient and repeatable - unlike many people.
Thank you so much!
Hugs from Brazil 😊
Thank you Dr. Nic. Great help!
My pleasure!
Thanks, doing my dissertation for dentistry, thanks for the video
Glad it was helpful!
Your channel is so helpful!
Glad you think so!
Beautiful explanation, thank you so much!
Thanks. It is so nice to have my efforts appreciated.
Hi ! I m one of the fan of your videos . 👍👍thanks 🙏🏻
Glad you like them!
Amazing way to explain!!!
Glad it was helpful! It has taken a while to work out how to make it clear.
Thank you for your channel .
Welcome!
i think this is very well explained. thank you :)
Glad you think so!
My favorite scene from any if your videos was when you said “In general,” and had a picture of Napoleon (I think). Also, when the question was “Male or Female” and the researcher was yelling at the subject “Make your choice!”
I know. My son used to edit my videos, or put a final funny touch on them and he has a real talent for it. He makes me laugh out loud at my own videos. I'm not as funny, though I do try to keep a light touch. I'm hoping my clear explanations will keep people coming back.
So, it means we can reject the null hypothesis if the p is 0.02? Also, thank you a lot Dr.Nic, you made Statistics more enjoyable for me!
Edit: I cannot access the web content anymore and it said 404 web page not found. Could you kindly check that as well?
This is awesome, thank you
Glad you like it!
that clarified things
Glad to hear it. The p-value is a difficult concept and it has taken me a while to get the nerve to make this video.
thank you so much for rhe great explanation. i want to ask you if i can use it in teaching??
Hi Abdallah
You are most welcome to use any or all of the videos in your teaching. You can see them all described on our website: creativemaths.net/videos/
If you would like to support my endeavours you could become a channel member. This also gives you access to some more videos: th-cam.com/channels/G32MfGLit1pcqCRXyy9cAg.htmljoin
Best wishes
Nic
I can recommend this video!
Please do!
You ARE amazing!
awww
great video. thank you
Glad you liked it!
Could you help us to show how to select random samples from a dataset in Excel for hypothesis
This video is good: th-cam.com/video/q8fU001P2lI/w-d-xo.html
My book says that when using the t-distribution, one should replace that s/sqrt(n) by s/sqrt(n-1)
This is not something I've heard of. For sample standard deviation you use n-1 in the denominator as opposed to the population standard deviation. But for the standard error, it is customary to use s/sqrt n. Perhaps you or the book have those two calculations confused?
@@DrNic Ah, maybe it was me who got confused. May I check with you: Now after we calculate the sum of squares for the sample, we divide it by by (n-1) instead of by n? (and then take its square to get sample standard deviation) May I ask one more question, please: In this example, do we have to know that the population follows a normal distribution to use the t test, especially when the sample size is small?
Than you alot
Thanks 💕💕💕💕
You're welcome 😊
When sample size is 250 and population sd is unknown which test should i use tscore or z score ?
With a sample that size there is no difference.
Thank you so much
You are most welcome
thanks this is cool
I do my best
Regardless, thanks for putting this together! Good explanation!
Thank you
You're welcome
Like the video before I’ve finished it?
Of course! ;)