Wallis, Sean. Original image by author. A version of this plot is published in Wallis (2021: 180).[1]
Gaussian (normal approximation) intervals for n = 10 and n = 100 computed alongside an example logistic curve. Note examples of overshoot (the interval falsely predicts the true proportion p is outside its possible range [0, 1] and zero-width intervals (the interval falsely predicts the true proportion is exactly 0 or 1).
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Wallis, Sean. Original image by author. A version of this plot is published in Wallis (2021: 180).<ref name=Wallis2021> {{cite book | last = Wallis | first = Sean A. | title = Statistics in Corpus Linguistics - a new approach | publisher = Routledge | location = New York | isbn = 9781138589384 | url = https://www.routledge.com/Statistics-in-Corpus-Linguistics-Research-A-New-Approach/Wallis/p/book/9781138589384 | date = 2021 }}</ref> Gaussian (normal approximation) intervals for n = 1...