Locally correct confidence intervals for a binomial proportion: A new criteria for an interval estimator

06/29/2021
by   Paul H. Garthwaite, et al.
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Well-recommended methods of forming `confidence intervals' for a binomial proportion give interval estimates that do not actually meet the definition of a confidence interval, in that their coverages are sometimes lower than the nominal confidence level. The methods are favoured because their intervals have a shorter average length than the Clopper-Pearson (gold-standard) method, whose intervals really are confidence intervals. Comparison of such methods is tricky – the best method should perhaps be the one that gives the shortest intervals (on average), but when is the coverage of a method so poor that it should not be classed as a means of forming confidence intervals? As the definition of a confidence interval is not being adhered to, another criterion for forming interval estimates for a binomial proportion is needed. In this paper we suggest a new criterion; methods which meet the criterion are said to yield locally correct confidence intervals. We propose a method that yields such intervals and prove that its intervals have a shorter average length than those of any other method that meets the criterion. Compared with the Clopper-Pearson method, the proposed method gives intervals with an appreciably smaller average length. The mid-p method also satisfies the new criterion and has its own optimality property.

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