On 25 Jun 2003 23:50:17 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Felix Bach) wrote: > Hello, > I would like to ask you if it is possible to do a repeated measurement > anova (or a MANOVA) for the following situation: A person is answering > 10 times to a questiion. The answersa allow three different types of > grammar types (either A or B or C). Is it possibble to count the > number of used grammar types and then use a repeated measurement ANOVA > or MANOVA to look which grammar is used most? A multinomial regression > sounds more plausibe but I haven't got a module which accounts for
I assume that many people each gave 10 answers, and the count is what is interesting. Do you have groups that you want to discriminate? - that could be a discriminant function with 2 or 3 variables. Two dummy variables are enough, if the sum is always 10. My guess is that you have groups. However, you don't seem to have given a problem, so far as I can see. You can say that one person used Type B (say) most often, if that was most frequent out of 10. And then? -- Rich Ulrich, [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.pitt.edu/~wpilib/index.html "Taxes are the price we pay for civilization." Justice Holmes. . . ================================================================= Instructions for joining and leaving this list, remarks about the problem of INAPPROPRIATE MESSAGES, and archives are available at: . http://jse.stat.ncsu.edu/ . =================================================================
