These videos have helped me so much. I'm doing undergraduate research where I'm ranking the discriminatory power of measurement features in an image analysis program. I'm comparing biofilm architectures of five treatments at two spatial scales (1x and 10x resolution). We've been using ANOVA, Tukey, and Mann Whitney tests to compare the 1x to the 10x images for each treatment. Before watching these videos I had no idea what the significance of these tests were, or really why I was doing them.
Which test should i use if the n's of my three groups aren't equal (i.e. i have more data in one group than the other)? Need fast help please! Thank you for taking the time to answer my question!!
we worked this out with my class and we came of with an answer of 7.53 SSbetween instead of 7.14 for the post hoc test of scheffe at time stamp 4:51 of the video. how did you arrive and the answer of 7.14?
Why do you choose the number 3 as the "degree of freedom between" when using the q table at 3.21 (time stamp), when it was calculated as 2 in the "one way ANOVA" vedio ?
can the results in the post hoc test be negative? i tried the scheffe method on other questions but the results were less than the F I got originally. What does that mean?
this is very helpful but in my assignment I've been asked to use a significance level of 10% and i cant find a table which includes that anywhere, can you help me please??? anyone??
These videos have helped me so much. I'm doing undergraduate research where I'm ranking the discriminatory power of measurement features in an image analysis program. I'm comparing biofilm architectures of five treatments at two spatial scales (1x and 10x resolution). We've been using ANOVA, Tukey, and Mann Whitney tests to compare the 1x to the 10x images for each treatment. Before watching these videos I had no idea what the significance of these tests were, or really why I was doing them.
10 years later and it still helps thousands of students.
Which test should i use if the n's of my three groups aren't equal (i.e. i have more data in one group than the other)? Need fast help please! Thank you for taking the time to answer my question!!
Would you provide a video on how to perform the ANOVA post-hoc tests on SPSS?
If we are comparing how different they are then that means they can be dependent variables right then it is almost same like repeated measures anova
we worked this out with my class and we came of with an answer of 7.53 SSbetween instead of 7.14 for the post hoc test of scheffe at time stamp 4:51 of the video. how did you arrive and the answer of 7.14?
this helped alot.
Why do you choose the number 3 as the "degree of freedom between" when using the q table at 3.21 (time stamp), when it was calculated as 2 in the "one way ANOVA" vedio ?
Why would you use MS-within instead of MS between groups?
can the results in the post hoc test be negative?
i tried the scheffe method on other questions but the results were less than the F I got originally. What does that mean?
thanks alot
How to get F comparison down value 0.57?
Isn't the MSbetween equation the SSbetween, and then divided by df?
I would not question this Master. He knows what he is doing.
@@alexandraljungberg6636 ...6 years later
How to Calculate the p value in the newmaN keuls test??
this is very helpful but in my assignment I've been asked to use a significance level of 10% and i cant find a table which includes that anywhere, can you help me please??? anyone??
Thanks ;)
How do you get the "Q table" in Tukery's HSD post-hoc test?
u can google "q table" on images
edit: I just realized half of the comments are from 7 years ago lmao
why does the degrees of freedom 18?
21 - 3 = 18
number of values - number of groups
But the number of elements here are just 14, right? So why not 11?
@@NatrajAthreya there are three groups each with 7 participants, 7 * 3 = 21
What's MSwithin?
I hate stats :(
I prefer Turkey HSD one
How to get 18 degree of freedom