[R] R: chi-Squared distribution in Friedman test
Vito Ricci
vito_ricci at yahoo.com
Fri Jan 21 14:53:08 CET 2005
Hi,
pchisq -> distribution function
dchisq -> density function
pval is the area under the curve, to calculte it you
use distribution function which is the integral of
density function. See:
http://www.itl.nist.gov/div898/handbook/eda/section3/eda362.htm
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DistributionFunction.html
f(x) density function
F(x) distribution function =Pr(X<x)= integral(f(x))
Hoping I helped you!
Regards
Vito
you wrote:
Dear R helpers:
Thanks for the previous reply. I am using Friedman
racing test. According the the book "Pratical
Nonprametric Statistic" by WJ Conover, after computing
the statistics, he suggested to use chi-squared or F
distribution to accept or reject null hypothesis.
After looking into the source code, I found that R
uses chi-sqaured distribution as below:
PVAL <- pchisq(STATISTIC, PARAMETER, lower = FALSE)
but still I cant figure out why they are using this
pschisq insted of dchisq. Sorry I am wrong!!
Thanking you
truly
Prasanna
=====
Diventare costruttori di soluzioni
Became solutions' constructors
"The business of the statistician is to catalyze
the scientific learning process."
George E. P. Box
Top 10 reasons to become a Statistician
1. Deviation is considered normal
2. We feel complete and sufficient
3. We are 'mean' lovers
4. Statisticians do it discretely and continuously
5. We are right 95% of the time
6. We can legally comment on someone's posterior distribution
7. We may not be normal, but we are transformable
8. We never have to say we are certain
9. We are honestly significantly different
10. No one wants our jobs
Visitate il portale http://www.modugno.it/
e in particolare la sezione su Palese http://www.modugno.it/archivio/palese/
More information about the R-help
mailing list