Semi-tail Units: A Universal Scale for Test Statistics and Efficiency
Abstract
We introduce ζ- and s-values as quantile-based standardizations that are particularly suited for hypothesis testing. Unlike p-values, which express tail probabilities, s-values measure the number of semi-tail units into a distribution's tail, where each unit represents a halving of the tail area. This logarithmic scale provides intuitive interpretation: s=3.3 corresponds to the 10th percentile, s=4.3 to the 5th percentile, and s=5.3 to the 2.5th percentile. For two-tailed tests, ζ-values extend this concept symmetrically around the median. We demonstrate how these measures unify the interpretation of all test statistics on a common scale, eliminating the need for distribution-specific tables. The approach offers practical advantages: critical values follow simple arithmetic progressions, combining evidence from independent studies reduces to the addition of s-values, and semi-tail units provide the natural scale for expressing Bahadur slopes. This leads to a new asymptotic efficiency measure based on differences rather than ratios of slopes, where a difference of 0.15 semi-tail units means that the more efficient test moves samples 10\% farther into the tail. Through examples ranging from standardized test scores to poker hand rankings, we show how semi-tail units provide a natural and interpretable scale for quantifying extremeness in any ordered distribution.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.