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A researcher selects a random sample. A 90% confidence interval for a population mean \mu has
the property that the confidence interval for the population mean \mu calculated from this sample is correct with 90% confidence.
the property that if we repeatedly selected our random sample in exactly the same way, each time constructing a different 90% confidence interval for \mu, then in the long run 90% of those intervals would contain \mu.
the property that if we repeatedly selected our random sample in exactly the same way, each time constructing a different 90% confidence interval for \mu, then in the long run, these intervals would overlap and the overlapping interval would converge to the actual 90% confidence interval for \mu .
the property that if we repeatedly selected our random sample in exactly the same way, each time calculating a different sample mean, then in the long run 90% of those sample means will be contained in this confidence interval.
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