On 28 Feb 2002 07:37:16 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad Anderson)
wrote:
> Rich Ulrich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> > On 27 Feb 2002 11:59:53 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad Anderson)
> > wrote:
BA > > >
> > > I have a continuous response variable that range
s
> the data
[ snip, rest]
Looks to me like it might be reasonable to re-sort and re-score
the speed as reciprocal, "questions per hour" -- instead of
the original, hours per question. That emphasizes something
you (perhaps) omitted: some tests at the end were incomplete.
Also, Q/H
Anonymous God-fearer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone know how to generate a correlation matrix given a covariance
> matrix in Splus?
> Or could you give the details of how to do it in another language?
corr[i,j] = cov[i,j]/sqrt(cov[i,i]*cov[j,j])
===
to amplifiy a bit, the interpretability of regression tends to go down as
the assumptions of normality and homogeneous variance are markedly
different from reality. You can still go through the calcualtions but the
interpretation of results gets tricky. Factor analysis is a sort of
regression an
SR Millis wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>What is the correct pronunciation for "Akaike" as in AIC?
>
>Thanks,
>SR Millis (rhymes with "bacillus")
>
>
In Japanese, all letters are pronounced.
Try: Aka-ee-ke
Now try pronouncing Toyota! `y` is always a consonant in Japanese, so it
should
If, for example, normality assumption holds then by doing robust
regression instead of OLS you lose efficiency. So, it's not the same
result after all. But you can do both, compare and decide. If robust
regression produces results which are not really different from the OLS
then stay with OLS.
On
You don't need normality for regression. You may need it for certain
optimality properties to hold, but you can apply OLS without normality.
On 1 Mar 2002, Alex Yu wrote:
>
> I know that robust regression can downweight outliers. Should someone
> apply robust regression when the data have skewe
On 1 Mar 2002 00:36:01 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Yu)
wrote:
>
> I know that robust regression can downweight outliers. Should someone
> apply robust regression when the data have skewed distributions but do not
> have outliers? Regression assumptions require normality of residuals, but
> no
On 1 Mar 2002 04:51:42 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mobile Survey)
wrote:
> What do i do if I need to run a factor analysis and have non-normal
> distribution for some of the items (indicators)? Does Principal
> component analysis require the normality assumption.
There is no problem of non-normal
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eric Bohlman) wrote in message
news:...
> Rolf Dalin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> IIRC, your example is exactly the sort of situation for which Tobit
> modelling was invented.
Considered that (actually estimated a couple of Tobit models and if I
use a log transformed or bo
The Enclyclopedia of Biostatistics (Armitage P, Colton T; Wiley,
1999?) has an article on REML.
I have not seen the article, but usually their articles well explain
statistical concepts to non-statisticians.
The Encyclopedia is a resource you might find helpful in general. For
more info, see:
Rolf Dalin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Brad Anderson wrote:
>> I have a continuous response variable that ranges from 0 to 750. I only
>> have 90 observations and 26 are at the lower limit of 0,
> What if you treated the information collected by that variable as really
> two variables, one ca
But Mahalanobis distance is sensible to swamping and masking so is it really
a good measure for outliers?
DELOMBA a écrit dans le message ...
>What about Hat Matrix ? Mahalanobis distance ?
>
>Yves
>
>
>"Voltolini" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>00f301c1be68$13413000$fde9e3c8@oemcomputer..
A good book is
Pinheiro, J.C. and Bates., D.M. "mixed models with S and S-Plus",
Springer.
Kjetil Halvorsen
Dr Jonathan Newman wrote:
>
> I'm trying to find a good introduction to REML (restricted maximum
> likelihood). I'm a biologist rather than a statistician. If you have any
> suggesti
Dr Jonathan Newman wrote:
>
> I'm trying to find a good introduction to REML (restricted maximum
> likelihood). I'm a biologist rather than a statistician. If you have any
> suggestions I'd great appreciate hearing them. Thanks.
Lynch & Walsh (1998)? (Genetic Analysis of Quantitative Traits,
On 27 Feb 2002 14:14:44 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dennis Roberts) wrote:
> At 04:11 PM 2/27/02 -0500, Rich Ulrich wrote:
>
> >Categorizing the values into a few categories labeled,
> >"none, almost none, " is one way to convert your scores.
> >If those labels do make sense.
> well, if 750
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Glen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>"Chia C Chong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>news:...
>> Hi!
>> I have a set of random numbers and if I know their expectation/mean, would
>> it be possible to deduce a PDF to describe the distribution of them?
>Knowing t
At 09:51 AM 2/28/02 -0800, Jay Tanzman wrote:
>I partially did this, insofar as I ran Pearson and Spearman correlations
>between
>several of the scales and, not surprisingly, the two correlation coefficients
>and their p-values were similar. < that issue is entirely a separate
>one since t
> "Simon, Steve, PhD" wrote:
>
> Jay Tanzman got chewed out by his boss for averaging a 7 point ordinal scale.
> Generally it is not a good idea to argue with your boss, but perhaps you might
> ask what was the grade point average that he or she received in college. When
> you hear the response
At 07:37 AM 2/28/02 -0800, Brad Anderson wrote:
>I think a lot of folks just run standard analyses or arbitrarily apply
>some "normalizing" transformation because that's whats done in their
>field. Then report the results without really examining the
>underlying distributions. I'm curious how f
Rich Ulrich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> On 27 Feb 2002 11:59:53 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad Anderson)
> wrote:
>
> > I have a continuous response variable that ranges from 0 to 750. I
> > only have 90 observations and 26 are at the lower limit of 0, whi
Title: RE: Means of semantic differential scales
Jay Tanzman got chewed out by his boss for averaging a 7 point ordinal scale. Generally it is not a good idea to argue with your boss, but perhaps you might ask what was the grade point average that he or she received in college. When you hear
On 27 Feb 2002 15:01:24 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dennis Roberts) wrote:
>At 01:39 PM 2/27/02 -0600, Jay Warner wrote:
>
>> > >
>> > >Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
>
>just out of curiosity ... how many consider the above to be an example of a
>bipolar scale?
>
>i don't
DMR, I should have read your previous posting more carefully. I have now had
coffee.
>Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
is a question that has an extent response format. The cognitive schema the
response format tries to invoke might be reinforced by anchoring with zero f
I would consider it a unipolar extent scale. Maybe the visual anchor should be
0 to 6 to aid association with the number line concept.
Dennis Roberts wrote:
> At 01:39 PM 2/27/02 -0600, Jay Warner wrote:
>
> > > >
> > > >Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
>
> just out of c
Brad Anderson wrote:
> I have a continuous response variable that ranges from 0 to 750. I only
> have 90 observations and 26 are at the lower limit of 0,
What if you treated the information collected by that variable as really
two variables, one categorical variable indicating zero or non-zero
Good places to start:
Optimal feature extractors, that's better than PCA because you whiten your
inter class scatter and so put all inter class comparisons on the same
level. The good thing is this will also reduce your feature vector
dimensionality to c-1 (where c is # classes). PCA will not do
Corection typo: Should read 'Whiten intra class scatter'
"Mark Harrison" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:FIif8.16518$[EMAIL PROTECTED].;
> Good places to start:
>
> Optimal feature extractors, that's better than PCA because you whiten your
> inter class scatter and so put all inter clas
i thought of a related data situation ...but at the opposite end
what if you were interested in the relationship between the time it takes
students to take a test AND their test score
so, you have maybe 35 students in your 1 hour class that starts at 9AM ...
you decide to note (by your watch) t
Brad Anderson wrote:
>
> I have a continuous response variable that ranges from 0 to 750. I
> only have 90 observations and 26 are at the lower limit of 0, which is
> the modal category.
If it's continuous, it can't really have categories (apart from those
induced by recording the variable to
At 01:39 PM 2/27/02 -0600, Jay Warner wrote:
> > >
> > >Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
just out of curiosity ... how many consider the above to be an example of a
bipolar scale?
i don't
now, if we had an item like:
sad happy
1 . 7
THEN the mid point b
At 04:11 PM 2/27/02 -0500, Rich Ulrich wrote:
>Categorizing the values into a few categories labeled,
>"none, almost none, " is one way to convert your scores.
>If those labels do make sense.
well, if 750 has the same numerical sort of meaning as 0 (unit wise) ... in
terms of what is being
I am humbled by the insight & background knowledge expressed by Mssrs.
Williams and McLean, not to mention the string of others. My lack of
academic experince in the subject matter is painfully clear. Now to see if
I can find Osgood et al. When I consider how many research projects and
social/p
On 27 Feb 2002 11:59:53 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad Anderson)
wrote:
> I have a continuous response variable that ranges from 0 to 750. I
> only have 90 observations and 26 are at the lower limit of 0, which is
> the modal category. The mean is about 60 and the median is 3; the
> distributio
That is either a sloppiness in writing or reliance on the relationship
between eigen decomposition and SVD.
SSM - square symmetric matrix
AM - arbitrary matrix
In ED, SSM = Q E Q'
In SVD, AM = P D Q'
SSM = AM' AM
= Q D P' P D Q' = Q D D Q'
= Q E Q', if E = D D
I haven't checked
What about Hat Matrix ? Mahalanobis distance ?
Yves
"Voltolini" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
00f301c1be68$13413000$fde9e3c8@oemcomputer">news:00f301c1be68$13413000$fde9e3c8@oemcomputer...
> Hi,
>
> I would like to know if methods for detecting outliers
> using interquartil ranges are in
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--=_NextPart_000_0017_01C1BFC6.F446E040
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
O=BA=BB=B8=DE=C0=CF=C0=BA=C1=A4=BA=B8=C5=EB=BD=C5=B8=C1=C0=CC=BF=EB=C3=CB=
=C1=F8=B9=D7=C1=A4=BA=B8=BA=B8=C8
"Chia C Chong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:...
> Hi!
>
> I have a set of random numbers and if I know their expectation/mean, would
> it be possible to deduce a PDF to describe the distribution of them?
Knowing the mean tells you (almost) nothing abo
Jay Tanzman wrote:
>
> Jay Warner wrote:
> >
> > Jay Tanzman wrote:
> >
> > > I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> > > semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> > > self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
> >
part 2.
Ordinal variables come in two flavors. In purely ordinal data the number of
distinct values is pretty much the same as the number of cases. In ordered
category variables, there are only a few values that a variable may take, but
the intervals are perceived as very different.
Interval var
part 1.
A lot depends on your discipline. Since the issue of level of measurement rose
in the 60's and early 70's there have been different viewpoint.
For some qualitative data means textual or pictorial information.
For some it means nominal level data.
For some it means variables that the meas
>
> > 2. Perhaps more likely, your boss may have learned
> > (wrongly?) that parametric stats should not be done unless scales
> > of measurement are at least interval in quality.
>
> I don't know if his objection was to parametric statistics per se, but he did
> object to calculating means on t
and with bivariate data, neither component need be high or low!
Jon Cryer
At 12:14 PM 2/25/2002 -0700, you wrote:
>Of course it can be. An outlier is any value that is not usual for your data
>set.
>"Voltolini" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>002f01c1be21$65913d60$0fe9e3c8@oemcomputer">new
At 08:18 AM 2/26/02 -0800, Jay Tanzman wrote:
> > >
> > > Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
these contain more information than simply ordinality ... they give you
some indication of amount of stress too
differentiate this sort of item and response from:
rank order your
i think we are all missing the main point
if you have a number of these items where, your goal (perhaps) is to SUM
them together in some way ... where one end represents low amounts of the
"thing" presented and the other end represents large amounts of the thing
presented ... then ACROSS items
Jay Warner wrote:
>
> Jay Tanzman wrote:
>
> > I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> > semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> > self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
> >
> > Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__
jim clark wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> On Mon, 25 Feb 2002, Jay Tanzman wrote:
>
> > I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> > semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> > self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
> >
> > No
"J. Williams" wrote:
>
> On Mon, 25 Feb 2002 15:17:55 -0800, Jay Tanzman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> >I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> >semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> >self-administered questionnaire, and were
In article <00f301c1be68$13413000$fde9e3c8@oemcomputer>,
Voltolini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi,
>I would like to know if methods for detecting outliers
>using interquartil ranges are indicated for data with
>NON normal distribution.
>The software "Statistica" presents this method:
>data point
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Glen Barnett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Herman Rubin wrote:
>> In article ,
>> Chia C Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> >Hi!
>> >Does anyone come across some Matlab code to estimate the parameters for the
>> >Cauchy PDF?? Or some
Have you looked in the manual under "Constraint"? If you still have a
problem you should submit your question either to Stata tech support or
to the Stata list server (you can join at the Stata web site:
http://www.stata.com), rather than to a general newsgroup such as this
one.
Rich Goldstein
Hi
On Mon, 25 Feb 2002, Jay Tanzman wrote:
> I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
>
> Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__
In sci.stat.edu The Truth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Glen Barnett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>> The Truth wrote:
>> >
>> > Are there any "Numerical Recipes" like textbook on statistics and probability ?
>> > Just wondering..
>>
>> What do you mean, a boo
of course, to be fair to the first jay .. could be simply that his boss did
not like semantic diff. scales ... AND, for none of the reasons the second
jay below said ...
it would be helpful if the first jay could give us some further info on why
his boss was so ticked off ...
At 09:39 PM 2/25
Jay Tanzman wrote:
> I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
> semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
> self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
>
> Not stressful 1__ 2__ 3__ 4__ 5__ 6__ 7__ Very stressful
>
> So, wh
Voltolini wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> My doubt isan outlier can be a LOW data value in the sample (and not
> just the highest) ?
>
> Several text boks dont make this clear !!!
What makes an outlier "an outlier" is your model. If your model accounts
for all the observations, you can't really call an
Herman Rubin wrote:
>
> In article ,
> Chia C Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Hi!
>
> >Does anyone come across some Matlab code to estimate the parameters for the
> >Cauchy PDF?? Or some other sources about the method to estimate their
> >parameters??
>
> What
Voltolini wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I would like to know if methods for detecting outliers
> using interquartil ranges are indicated for data with
> NON normal distribution.
>
> The software "Statistica" presents this method:
> data point value > UBV + o.c.*(UBV - LBV)
> data point value < LBV - o.c.*
On Mon, 25 Feb 2002 15:17:55 -0800, Jay Tanzman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>I just got chewed out by my boss for modelling the means of some 7-point
>semantic differential scales. The scales were part of a written,
>self-administered questionnaire, and were laid out like this:
>
>Not stressful 1
of course, if one has control over the data, checking the coding and making
sure it is correct is a good thing to do
if you do not have control over that, then there may be very little you can
do with it and in fact, you may be totally UNaware of an outlier problem
i see as a potentially MUCH
In article ,
Chia C Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi!
>Does anyone come across some Matlab code to estimate the parameters for the
>Cauchy PDF?? Or some other sources about the method to estimate their
>parameters??
What is so difficult about maximum likelihood?
--A59A95727DA65C2AB2F9EBF5
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
That being said, occasions can arise where there are outliers other than
from measurement or data entry error. Different disciplines have different
approaches.
What discipline are yo
Of course it can be. An outlier is any value that is not usual for your data
set.
"Voltolini" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
002f01c1be21$65913d60$0fe9e3c8@oemcomputer">news:002f01c1be21$65913d60$0fe9e3c8@oemcomputer...
> Hi,
>
>
> My doubt isan outlier can be a LOW data value in the sam
On 25 Feb 2002 07:56:56 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (kjetil
halvorsen) wrote:
>It isstraightforward tlo write down the loglikelihood, and then whatever
>optimization routine (there must be one in Matlab) will help you!
Just be careful when searching, because Cauchy likelihoods are
frequently multi-
"Glen Barnett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
a5dev7$8jn$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:a5dev7$8jn$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
> Chia C Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> a5d38d$63e$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:a5d38d$63e$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> >
> >
> > "Glen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
Mark wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm CS student interested in Radford Neal thesis called "Bayesian
> Learning for Neural Networks". I know that some years ago this thesis
> was available for download from author's site, but nowadays there
> isn't possible. I have searched it on Intenet so I have not kno
> > > Do you want to make any assumptions about the form of the conditional,
> > > or the joint, or any of the marginals?
> >
> > Well, the X & Y are dependent and hence there are being descibed by a joint
> > PDF.
>
> Can you at least indicate whether any of them are restricted to be positive?
It isstraightforward tlo write down the loglikelihood, and then whatever
optimization routine (there must be one in Matlab) will help you!
Kjetil Halvorsen
Chia C Chong wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> Does anyone come across some Matlab code to estimate the parameters for the
> Cauchy PDF?? Or some other s
John Ziker wrote:
> This research deals with the classical anthropological question of
> food sharing among hunters and gatherers. There are a number of
> hypotheses being discussed within the field. This study is relevant
> for two models, namely kinship cooperation and reciprocity. The
> kinshi
Chia C Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
a5d38d$63e$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:a5d38d$63e$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
>
> "Glen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Do you want to make any assumptions about the form of the conditional,
> > or t
MAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2002 9:49 AM
Subject: Re: odds vs probabilities
> probabilities. I know that probs have a problem in that they don't
> make multiplicative sense:
"Glen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chia C Chong) wrote in message
news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> > Helloo..
> >
> > I have 1000 samples 3 RVs (say X, Y and Z) drawn from a series of
> > experiments. My intention is to find
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chia C Chong) wrote in message
news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> Helloo..
>
> I have 1000 samples 3 RVs (say X, Y and Z) drawn from a series of
> experiments. My intention is to find the PDF of Z condition on X and Y
> i.e. f(Z|X,Y). I am not sure what is the proper way of doing i
if you don't want to make to many assumptions then you can try
nonparametric estimation (estimate f(X,Y,Z) and f(X,Y) by kernel methods).
Check out books on nonparametric methods ("Nonparametric Econometrics" by
Pagan, for example, or a book by Silverman(?)).
On 24 Feb 2002, Chia C Chong wrote:
Mark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi,
>
> I'm CS student interested in Radford Neal thesis called "Bayesian
> Learning for Neural Networks". I know that some years ago this thesis
> was available for download from author's site, but nowadays
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002 18:00:16 +0100, Mark
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm CS student interested in Radford Neal thesis called "Bayesian
> Learning for Neural Networks". I know that some years ago this thesis
> was available for download from author's site, but nowadays there
> isn't pos
On 23 Feb 2002 06:49:58 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad Branford)
wrote:
> hi,
>
> thanks. sorry if I posed the question poorly. actually, what I'm
> looking for is an intuitive understanding of when to use odds and when
> probabilities. I know that probs have a problem in that they don't
> make
Zachary Agatstein wrote:
>
> Can you help me solve this problem:
>
> There are 8 baskets and 4 apples. Thrown at random, 3 of the 4 apples
> can go to any basket. The 4th apple, however, can only be thrown into
> baskets 1 through 4. What is the probability that there is no more than
> one
Speculatively, temperature could confound or be a rival hypothesis in a few ways.
It would influence what could be in solution, pollutants as well as things that
offset them. It could be what varies across the parts of rivers or between rivers.
It might differentially influence survival or breed
Art Kendall wrote:
[snip good points]
> in your quasi-experiment you can possibly contrast different levels of specific
> pollutants, as well as kinds of pollutants, in different rivers at different
> times.
> I'm not a biologist, but I would be amazed if temperature did not affect
> populatio
hi,
thanks. sorry if I posed the question poorly. actually, what I'm
looking for is an intuitive understanding of when to use odds and when
probabilities. I know that probs have a problem in that they don't
make multiplicative sense: for instance, assume I have a probability
of winning of 55%; i
It depends on which science.
In social, behavioral, industrial, and many health related fields, the
distinction is sharply drawn between true experiments where there is active
manipulation of one or more treatment independent variables and random
assignment of cases to treatment. (also, it simpli
Jay Tanzman wrote:
>I agree that you can test a hypothesis by using an observational study, but
>that
>does not make it an experiment. The original poster was looking for a
>definition to use in a lecture, and an experiment, by definition, involes
>assignment of treatments to experimental units.
Art Kendall wrote:
>In SPSS output ignore the lines for equal variances, and use the lines for
>unequal variances.
Last year on this group, there was an interesting dataset posted, in which the
equal and unequal variance t tests give very different results:
Temperatures from Portion 1 of a st
Inasmuch as the objective is to 'drain the swamp' - reduce product &
process variation, I find that in practice Wheeler's suggestion of focus
on causes of that variation is on the mark. the procedure from the
old Ford Manual, and I believe the 6th & 7th Ed. of Grant & Leavenworth,
puts the focus
Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I was trying to suggest that he meant the slope of the CDF was the
> height of the PDF.
Oh, okay. Yes, that would be correct, but it shouldn't be called probability!
Glen
===
On Sat, 23 Feb 2002 00:27:00 +1100, "Glen Barnett"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>> On Fri, 22 Feb 2002 08:55:42 +1100, "Glen Barnett"
>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> >Bob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in mes
SSCHEINE wrote:
>
> Let me take a (somewhat) contrarian position to those previously
> expressed. An experiment is any test of a hypothesis. An experiment can
> involve the use of observational (unmanipulated) data, as long as the
> hypothesis is clearly stated prior to the collection of the da
Title: RE: SPC control limits
Jay Warner writes:
>The 'party line' is to take the first 30 or so points, calculate
>limits, throw out any outside ones & add more at the end, until you
>have 30 points, all of which are inside the control limits.
Actually, I have hea
On 19 Feb 2002 15:14:01 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Trevor Bond)
wrote:
[ snip, much ]
> affected who won the gold medal. In fact, Looney (1994, p. 156)
> concluded:
> "all of the judges with an Eastern block or communistic background
> not only ranked Baiul better than expected, but ranked Ker
Let me take a (somewhat) contrarian position to those previously
expressed. An experiment is any test of a hypothesis. An experiment can
involve the use of observational (unmanipulated) data, as long as the
hypothesis is clearly stated prior to the collection of the data. While
it is true that an
Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> On Fri, 22 Feb 2002 08:55:42 +1100, "Glen Barnett"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >Bob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> >> A straight line CDF would im
Rich Ulrich wrote:
> I've always done this in SPSS (6.1 and earlier) with
> ANOVA vara by grps(1,4) with covar/
Likewise.
However, as I'm in a funny mood, it occurred to me that you could
use the residuals from correlating the covariates with the separate
grooup scores as input to a Mann-Whi
OK. You have a case where you sample from a 'population' of times from situation A a
number of times, and from Situation B a number of times. Maybe C, D, etc. too.
To compare 2 of these babies, use a t test. Keep sample size (n's of each) about
equal, and go for it. Student 't' test is pretty
sure is easy in minitab ... one can draw a very nice curve (it's easy but,
hard to post here) but, to make a distribution easy for viewing we can
MTB > rand 10 c1; <<< generated 10 values from
SUBC> chis 4. <<< a chi square distribution with 4 degrees of freedom
MTB > dotp c1
Dotplot:
Yvette wrote:
>Prediction Model using double exponential smoothing to estimate the
>linear trend in prices (as originally reported) and extending the
>trend to future years. The base period is about 8-10 years and a
>smoothing constant needs to be used to make the trend fairly
>responsive to ch
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ronny Richardson
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2002 7:29 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Chi-square chart in Excel
Can anyone tell me how to produce a chart of the chi-square distribution in
Excel? (I k
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Zachary Agatstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Can you help me solve this problem:
>There are 8 baskets and 4 apples. Thrown at random, 3 of the 4 apples
>can go to any basket. The 4th apple, however, can only be thrown into
>baskets 1 through 4. What is the pro
On Wed, 20 Feb 2002 22:21:38 -, "Chia C Chong"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip, various discussion before]
>
> I have an example of data of 2 RVs. When I tested the correlation between
> them, by simply find the correlation coefficient, it shows that the
> correlation coefficient is so smal
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002 08:55:42 +1100, "Glen Barnett"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Bob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>> A straight line CDF would imply the data is uniformly distributed,
>> that is, the probability of one event is the same as the p
1 - 100 of 5520 matches
Mail list logo