OK any statisticians here: stats question.
I have a sample from a binomial distribution. p (probability of success) of the distribution is unknown. Obviously I can estimate p from the sample p, but I need confidence limits on that estimate. I'm not sure how to do that.
EDIT: To make things awkward, the number of successes is zero. The sample size is 45, 26 or 8
Followup question. If I have two samples, again from binomial distributions with unknown p, what is the probability that they come from the same population. One sample has sample p = 0
Context: The first problem relates to estimating the probability of making sales based on a first day of zero sales. The second relates to figuring out if a day of training actually makes a difference or if it's just luck. The results will determine whether or not I continue with the job.
Estimating confidence limits for p from a sample of a binomial distribution
- cantab
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Estimating confidence limits for p from a sample of a binomial distribution
Last edited by cantab on Fri Jul 25, 2008 10:50 am, edited 1 time in total.