Good day,
A very well writen book and easy to understand is by J.L. Fleiss "Design and
analysis of clinical experiments" (ISBN 0-471-82047-4)
--
Dr Julie Lamoureux, dmd, MSc
Tampa, Florida
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"David Jensen" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
tju96.617$[EMAIL
"Robert J. MacG. Dawson" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
dennis roberts wrote:
At 12:56 PM 1/17/01 -0400, Robert J. MacG. Dawson wrote:
The testing example is not a stationary process,
well, does this mean that NO testing example when there is a less than
perfect r between the two sets
Rich Ulrich writes:
The Relative Risk for two groups is also familiar, Risk1/Risk2, but
it becomes intractable to useful statistics (and misleading, to boot)
when the Risks are not small.
That's an interesting comment. Most people would argue the opposite: that
the odds ratio is misleading when
At 08:29 AM 1/19/01 -0500, Bruce Weaver wrote:
>On 17 Jan 2001, Robert J. MacG. Dawson wrote:
snip
>
>Dr. Dawson has touched on something here that I've always found a bit
>puzzling--the oft stated ANOVA assumption that the populations from which
>you sample must be normal. I've always had a
Title:
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A behavior lasts one second and occurs one time in a 7 hour period, if
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times, four times, or five times during that 7 hour period, how does the
probability