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On the T-test

Abstract

The TT-test is probably the most popular statistical test; it is routinely recommended by the textbooks. The applicability of the test relies upon the validity of normal or Student's approximation to the distribution of Student's statistic tn\,t_n. However, the latter assumption is not valid as often as assumed. We show that normal or Student's approximation to \L(tn)\,\L(t_n)\, does not hold uniformly even in the class Pn\,{\cal P}_n\, of samples from zero-mean unit-variance bounded distributions. We present lower bounds to the corresponding error. The fact that a non-parametric test is not applicable uniformly to samples from the class Pn\,{\cal P}_n\, seems to be established for the first time. It means the TT-test can be misleading, and should not be recommended in its present form. We suggest a generalisation of the test that allows for variability of possible limiting/approximating distributions to \L(tn)\,\L(t_n).

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