In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jerry Dallal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ... I make the point on my web page that P values make sense >only in the context of fixed level testing. Otherwise, you leave >yourself open to Harold Jeffrey's criticism that those who do >hypothesis testing act on the basis of rare events that they don't >see. If one says only that the P value is the probability of seeing >results as or more extreme than what was observed, one leaves one's >self open to the question, "Why should I care about the probability >results I haven't seen?" I think you can't avoid this criticism so easily. The levels of the tests that you are using to determine the p value are determined by what these tests would do if the data had been other than what you saw, and on the probabilities of these data sets that weren't actually seen. Radford Neal . . ================================================================= Instructions for joining and leaving this list, remarks about the problem of INAPPROPRIATE MESSAGES, and archives are available at: . http://jse.stat.ncsu.edu/ . =================================================================
