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by energy123
301 days ago
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It's not, that would be quite the misunderstanding of statistical power. N being big means that small real effects can plausibly be detected as being statistically significant. It doesn't mean that a larger proportion of measurements are falsely identified as being statistically significant. That will still occur at a 5% frequency or whatever your alpha value is, unless your null is misspecified. |
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But even though you know the measurement can't be exactly 0.000 (with infinitely many decimal places) a priori, you don't know if your measurement is any good a priori or whether you're measuring the right thing.