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Published byNelson Campbell Modified over 8 years ago
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ANalysis Of VAriance can be used to test for the equality of three or more population means. H 0 : 1 = 2 = 3 = ... = k H a : Not all population means are equal For each population, the response variable is The variances of the response variables are all equal to The observations must be normally distributed. 2 independent. ANOVA
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Sample means are “close” together because there is only one sampling distribution when H 0 is true. Sampling Distribution of x given H 0 is true ANOVA
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There are k treatments: is computed from a random sample of size For j = 1 2 3 k The overall sample mean: yada, yada, yada ANOVA Dividing the following by k – 1 givens the MSTR
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There are k treatments: is computed from a random sample of size For j = k The overall sample mean: ANOVA Dividing the following by k – 1 givens the MSTR
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Sample means come from different sampling distributions, and so are not as “close” together when H 0 is false. Sampling Distribution of x when H 0 is false ANOVA
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There are k treatments: is computed from a random sample of size For j = 1 2 3 k yada, yada, yada The overall total number of observations in all samples: n T = n 1 + n 2 + n 3 + … + n k ANOVA Dividing the following by n T – k givens the MSE
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There are k treatments: is computed from a random sample of size For j = The overall total number of observations in all samples: n T = n 1 + n 2 + n 3 + … + n k ANOVA k
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The following is the SST which has n T – 1 degrees of freedom
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MSE Treatment Error Total SSTR SSE k – 1 n T – k MSTR Source of Variation Sum of Squares Degrees of Freedom Mean Squares F -stat F …we reject H 0 If F-stat is “BIG” … … you cannot reject H 0 If F-stat is “small”… SST n T – 1 The above ANOVA procedure is an example of a completely randomized design, and is applicable when treatments are randomly assigned to the experimental units useful when the experimental units are homogenous ANOVA
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Example 1 Janet Reed would like to know if there is any significant difference in the mean number of hours worked per week for the department managers at her three manufacturing plants (in Buffalo, Pittsburgh, and Detroit). A simple random sample of five managers from each of the three plants was taken and the number of hours worked by each manager for the previous week is shown on the next slide. Conduct an F test at the 5% level of significance. NOTE: k = 3 and n 1 = n 2 = n 3 = 5 Completely Randomized Design
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1234512345 48 54 57 54 62 73 63 66 64 74 51 63 61 54 56 Plant 1 Buffalo Plant 2 Pittsburgh Plant 3 Detroit Observation nini 5 5 5 xixi si2si2 55 68 57 26.0 26.5 24.5 Average weekly hours worked by department managers Completely Randomized Design
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H 0 : 1 = 2 = 3 H a : Not all the means are equal 1. Develop the hypotheses. Completely Randomized Design 490 = 490 2. Determine the critical value 3. Compute MSTR MSTR = SSTR = 5( 55 – 60 ) 2 + 5( 68 – 60 ) 2 + 5( 57 – 60 ) 2 = ( 55 + 68 + 57 )/3 = 60 = 245 F = 3.89 Row: n T – k = 12 / 2 Column k – 1 = 2
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308 4. Compute the MSE MSE = SSE = 4( 26.0 ) + 4( 26.5 ) + 4( 24.5 ) F = MSTR/MSE 5. Compute the F -stat nTnT k = 308 = = 9.55 245 25.667 /(15 – 3) = / Completely Randomized Design
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25.667 Treatment Error Total 490 308 2 12 245 Source of Variation Sum of Squares Degrees of Freedom Mean Squares 9.55 F 798 14 At 5% significance, the mean hours worked by department managers is not the same. Do Not Reject H 0 Reject H 0 3.89 9.55 1 Completely Randomized Design
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