Statistics Help: Does increasing N reduce the risk of making a Type I error?

webnewland

Golden Member
Apr 21, 2001
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Type 1 error: Rejecting the hypothesis incorrectly

so does increasing N reduce the risk of making a Type I error? I'm thinking the alpha level we set (normally .05) is the same no matter how many N we use, so the more leptokurtotic graph still have .05 chance of getting type I error? Is this incorrect?
Thanks
 

webnewland

Golden Member
Apr 21, 2001
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yup, so I thought if we decide alpha level at the very beginning, no matter how many N we test, our chance of rejecting incorrectly will always be the alpha level. But many of my friends seem to say that increasing N will reduced the risk of making a Type I error.
 

Spoooon

Lifer
Mar 3, 2000
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It's a stretch, but you could make an argument for how increasing N reduces the risk of Type 1 error.
 

amnesiac

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
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Err..doesn't alpha itself distinguish the percent chance of making a Type I error?
If alpha = .05 = 5% chance of Type I error, right?
 

webnewland

Golden Member
Apr 21, 2001
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could you guys elaborate on how can increasing N reduced risk of making Type I error please?
Thanks