The equivalence test assesses whether a population mean is equivalent to a hypothesized value. You must define a threshold difference that is considered equivalent to no difference. The Test Equivalence option uses the Two One-Sided Tests (TOST) approach. Two one-sided t tests are constructed for the null hypotheses that the difference between the true mean and the hypothesized value exceeds the threshold. If both null hypotheses are rejected, this implies that the true difference does not exceed the threshold. You conclude that the mean can be considered practically equivalent to the hypothesized value.
The Test Equivalence report in Figure 2.11 is for the variable BMI in the Diabetes.jmp sample data table. The Hypothesized Mean is 26.5 and the Difference Considered Practically Zero is specified as 0.5.
Figure 2.11 Equivalence Test Report