I did not understand this problem.  Perhaps no one else did, either,
since I have not seen any comment.

On 9 Apr 2004 11:25:41 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Juergen Fritz)
wrote:

> I have the following reaction:
> 
> 0.2813+-0.0984 A  +  0.0192+-0.0184 B    ---->   0.1052+-0.0509 X

"reaction"?  - I think of chemistry.  The fact that there 
are coefficients on both sides makes me think it is not
the statistics that I am used to.

> 
> This reaction now has to normalized such that the coefficient for X
> equals one, i.e. a reaction in the following form is searched:
> 
> xx A + yy B ---> 1 X
 (normalized, why?  Where did coefficients come from for X?)
> 
> How can I calculate xx and yy correctly. The coefficients for A and B
> are the results of a parameter estimation with estimated 95%
> confidence limits.
> 
> Any help on that issue greatly appreciated.

Hope this helps.

-- 
Rich Ulrich, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pitt.edu/~wpilib/index.html
.
.
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