GretaGarbo (09-01-2012), victorxstc (09-01-2012)
Hi,
I came accross this interesting white paper.
Here is the link.
It deals with the topic of the assumptions of traditional t-test and of its comparison with the Welch's t. The pros and cons of each are evaluated.
I found it in the site of Minitab program. Nonetheless, I think it can prove useful to a more general audience.
Hope it helps
Best Regards
Gm
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read -Groucho Marx-
GretaGarbo (09-01-2012), victorxstc (09-01-2012)
Oh man. We did a lab/homework that was investigating essentially everything they went over in that paper in my Stat 601 course. I probably still have my R code lying around if anybody wants to conduct similar simulation studies for themselves in R.
"His programming is malfunctioning. It begins! Get your weapons, he's going to become a killbot!!!" - bryangoodrich
Thanks for sharing this nice paper with us![]()
"victor is the reviewer from hell" -Jake
I think it would be really great if Dason shared his code, or part of it, for this.
This (area) seems to be one of those that are most frequently asked about. “My data is not normally distributed….”. Those who have, say 12 and 17 observations that are slightly skewed could check themselves how sensitive it is.
edit:
Thanks Gianmarco for bringing this link.
Actually I just checked and apparently I don't have that code anymore. The server I used for my 601 homework crashed and there were adequate backups made on that one apparently. Since I only used that server for 601 I forgot that it had crashed since I had backups of most other stuff. I could probably recreate most of it fairly easily though.
"His programming is malfunctioning. It begins! Get your weapons, he's going to become a killbot!!!" - bryangoodrich
Victorxstc,
you are welcome.
You could also read another article I posted some time ago... If I manage to find the thread I will surely point it out to you replying to this thread.
As to Dason's question, I would suggest to you to assume unequal variance....just to keep on the safe ;-)
Gm
Edit: here is the link to the article: GD Ruxton, "The unequal variance t-test is an underused alternative to Student’s t-test and the Mann–Whitney U test".
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read -Groucho Marx-
Hey GM
Thanks for the second paper
The title itself is indicative of its advantage over the routine t testSo I will switch to using it for usual cases
"victor is the reviewer from hell" -Jake
That second paper was greatI will use Welch t test only (or mostly) from now on
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"victor is the reviewer from hell" -Jake
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