I don't think I'm mad at maths. I know I am.Hakei wrote:
Reaper, you think you're mad at maths. How do you calculate P values in binomial distribution to test an alternate hypothesis?
And to test the alternate hypothesis it always helps to have a starting one. So maybe some context would be a good idea.
But, to calculate a probability, we need to figure out the probability distribution of the test statistic X.
Eg. the raw data for the original hypothesis.