thanks bertrand. yes, it does answer my question.

one of the reasons i asked is that the randomise function in fsl does the
opposite and reports 1-p (it is noted in their docs - but one has to read it
:) ).

cheers,

satra


On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 5:55 PM, bthirion <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
> It is the probability of observing what you have by chance.
> [and generally the integral of the null density at the right of the
> observed value]
> p<0.02 is significant
> p<0.98 is not.
> Do I answer your question ?
>
> B
>
>
> On 10/03/2011 11:38 PM, Satrajit Ghosh wrote:
>
> hi,
>
>  what does the returned p-value represent? (more specifically what is the
> difference between p=0.02 and p=0.98)
>
> cheers,
>
> satra
>
>
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