On the lengths of t-based confidence intervals
Given n=mk iid samples from N(θ,σ^2) with θ and σ^2 unknown, we have two ways to construct t-based confidence intervals for θ. The traditional method is to treat these n samples as n groups and calculate the intervals. The second, and less frequently used, method is to divide them into m groups with each group containing k elements. For this method, we calculate the mean of each group, and these k mean values can be treated as iid samples from N(θ,σ^2/k). We can use these k values to construct t-based confidence intervals. Intuition tells us that, at the same confidence level 1-α, the first method should be better than the second one. Yet if we define "better" in terms of the expected length of the confidence interval, then the second method is better because the expected length of the confidence interval obtained from the first method is shorter than the one obtained from the second method. Our work proves this intuition theoretically. We also specify that when the elements in each group are correlated, the first method becomes an invalid method, while the second method can give us correct results. We illustrate this with analytical expressions.
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