Chow's defense of Null-hypothesis testing: Too traditional?

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (2):199-199 (1998)
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Abstract

I disagree with several of Chow's traditional descriptions and justifications of null hypothesis testing: (1) accepting the null hypothesis whenever p > .05; (2) random sampling from a population; (3) the frequentist interpretation of probability; (4) having the null hypothesis generate both a probability distribution and a complement of the desired conclusion; (5) assuming that researchers must fix their sample size before performing their study.

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