In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
>
>> Shana Mueller wrote:
>
>> > I am looking for a stastical software package I have only used the JMP
>> > software (mostly for Design of Experiments) in the past but am looking
>> > for software that will not only help in planning exp
In article ,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
>
>My daughter has asked me if there are any tools / software programs that can
>resolve standard deviations, while Excel can determine a standard deviation
>of the Population, what formula is used for the
>(A) 5th Standard Devi
~~~
BEYOND THE FORMULA IV
"Introductory Statistics for A New Century:
Looking at the Complete Picture of Curriculum,
Teaching Techniques, Technology and Applications"
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000 02:15:52 GMT, Gene Gallagher
< snip, good summary of some issues >
> SO, my question is "What is the current thinking on the robustness of
> the Kruskal-Wallis test for testing groups with very different
> variances?" Is Underwood right in his assessment that the nonparametr
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000 Llorenç Badiella <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is it a problem that there exists colinearity between
> variables when performing a Log-Reg? If so, how avoid it?
It can be a problem, or for that matter several problems. Depends on how
severe the collinearity is, among other
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000, Bernard Higgins wrote:
>
>
> Hi Bruce
Hello Bernard.
>
> The point I was making is that when developing hypothesis tests,
> from a theoretical point of view, the sampling distribution of the
> test statistic from which critical values or p-values etc are
> obtained, i
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000 06:05:27 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I saw in a recent journal article mention of a technique for converting
> ordinal scales to interval scales called *successive intervals*. I have
> searched several references and can find no mention of it. Does anyone
> know of a publi
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000 15:28:38 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is it a problem that there exists colinearity between
> variables when performing a Log-Reg? If so, how avoid it?
Sure, it is about the same problem as exists for OLS regression. If
you really want to *avoid* it, you have to rational
Tony Rossini has taken the time to explain to me the importance of distinguishing
between "freely available", "open source", and "public domain" software. The first
two have a similar meaning and are both different from the last. My software is more
in the first two categories. I stand corr
>Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2000 10:00:18 -0800
>To: EDSTAT-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>From: Jan de Leeuw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: time tests for S-plus
>Cc:
>Bcc:
>X-Attachments:
>
>This is where we stand so far
>
> Program:test1test2 test3test4test5
> Iterations: 500 1
This is where we stand so far
Program:test1test2 test3test4test5
Iterations: 500 1000 1 1000 10
S-PLUS 3.4: 18.3 9.0 38.4 31.0232.9
S-PLUS 5.1: 75.0152.6 317.1544.8224.1
R 0.90.1: 56.5
Hi Bruce
The point I was making is that when developing hypothesis tests,
from a theoretical point of view, the sampling distribution of the
test statistic from which critical values or p-values etc are
obtained, is determined by the null hypothesis. We need a probability
model to enable us
I study statistics in the University of Pernambuco, Brazil. I'd like to
obtain informations(paper, software) about Multidimensional Models for
Item Response Theory.
Thanks
Ronald
===
This list is open to everyone. Occasio
Hi all,
Is it a problem that there exists colinearity between
variables when performing a Log-Reg? If so, how avoid it?
Thanks in advance,
Llorenç Badiella
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
==
I stand by what I said. The function is a public-domain S-PLUS library. It is not an
R library at present.
If it clarifies this for anyone, in the future I'll label this as being in the
public-domain S-PLUS library
for S-PLUS users.
-Frank
"A.J. Rossini" wrote:
> > "FEH" == Frank E Harr
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000 Wendell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I saw in a recent journal article mention of a technique for converting
> ordinal scales to interval scales called *successive intervals*. I have
> searched several references and can find no mention of it. Does anyone
> know of a published
Springtime for Statistics (April-May-June)
Six New Jersey Area announcements
[1] Logistic Regression Short Course
[2] Clinical Trials Short Course
[3] Multiple Comparison & Exact Inference Short Courses
[4] Bates' Nonlinear Regression Short Course
[5] I
On Thu, 23 Mar 2000 16:01:13 -0500, Rich Ulrich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Now let me jump on Andy!
>
>
>On Thu, 23 Mar 2000 17:51:04 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andy Gilpin)
>wrote:
> < snip, problem; comment >
>>
>> Still, it seems to me that, other things equal, (a) measuring data
>> costs a r
On 24 Mar 2000, Bernard Higgins wrote:
> These are my thoughts:
>
> The sampling distribution of a test statistic is determined by the
> null hypothesis. So analysis of variance is used to test that a
> number of samples come from an identical Normal distribution
> against the alternative that
>There is a conflict between practice and experience in that a goal of
>practice is to reach the point where you carry out the procedure
>WITHOUT THINKING ABOUT THE UNDERLYING CONCEPTS OR PRINCIPLES. It
>beomes automated and brainless, a skill of the fingers (or toes). For
>that reason, I think
Muriel Strand wrote:
> i would like to (approximately) echo the other responses on this topic.
last
> fall i was almost trapped in a very poorly taught econometrics class and
the
> clincher was when i showed up to take the first exam and found out it was
to be
> closed book - it never even occu
Herman Rubin wrote:
> > snip
> >
> > This might possibly be the case for the weak students, but
> > not for the strong ones. It is the concepts which are the
> > most important part, and concepts need little, if any,
> > practice
and Muriel Strand responded:
> i'm not sure the statement below
> in addition, since good calculators allow storage ...
The problem arises when (eg) a few calculators can construct boxplots or
do t tests and the rest cannot. "Storage" is a convenient surrogate for
"all-singing, all-dancing, able to mix a martini and talk football"
Hi Gene
> I'd just finished telling my class that when the assumption of
> homogeneity of variances is violated, use the Kruskal-Wallis test
> instead of the parametric equivalent.
> One student pointed out to me afterwards that Underwood (1997, p. 131,
> Experiments in Ecology) states that the
Does anybody know where to find basic bibliografical info about Bruno
de Finetti on the web?
Thank you very much
Renzo
===
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