Two- and K-Sample Location Tests
Testing the equality of the distributions of a numeric response variable in two or more independent groups against shift alternatives.
## S3 method for class 'formula' oneway_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' oneway_test(object, ...) ## S3 method for class 'formula' wilcox_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' wilcox_test(object, conf.int = FALSE, conf.level = 0.95, ...) ## S3 method for class 'formula' kruskal_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' kruskal_test(object, ...) ## S3 method for class 'formula' normal_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' normal_test(object, ties.method = c("mid-ranks", "average-scores"), conf.int = FALSE, conf.level = 0.95, ...) ## S3 method for class 'formula' median_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' median_test(object, mid.score = c("0", "0.5", "1"), conf.int = FALSE, conf.level = 0.95, ...) ## S3 method for class 'formula' savage_test(formula, data, subset = NULL, weights = NULL, ...) ## S3 method for class 'IndependenceProblem' savage_test(object, ties.method = c("mid-ranks", "average-scores"), conf.int = FALSE, conf.level = 0.95, ...)
formula |
a formula of the form |
data |
an optional data frame containing the variables in the model formula. |
subset |
an optional vector specifying a subset of observations to be used. Defaults
to |
weights |
an optional formula of the form |
object |
an object inheriting from class |
conf.int |
a logical indicating whether a confidence interval for the difference in
location should be computed. Defaults to |
conf.level |
a numeric, confidence level of the interval. Defaults to |
ties.method |
a character, the method used to handle ties: the score generating function
either uses mid-ranks ( |
mid.score |
a character, the score assigned to observations exactly equal to the median:
either 0 ( |
... |
further arguments to be passed to |
oneway_test
, wilcox_test
, kruskal_test
,
normal_test
, median_test
and savage_test
provide the
Fisher-Pitman permutation test, the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test, the
Kruskal-Wallis test, the van der Waerden test, the Brown-Mood median test and
the Savage test. A general description of these methods is given by Hollander
and Wolfe (1999). For the adjustment of scores for tied values see
Hájek, Šidák and Sen (1999, pp. 133–135).
The null hypothesis of equality, or conditional equality given block
,
of the distribution of y
in the groups defined by x
is tested
against shift alternatives. In the two-sample case, the two-sided null
hypothesis is H_0: mu = 0, where μ = Y_1 - Y_2
and Y_s is the median of the responses in the sth sample. In case
alternative = "less"
, the null hypothesis is H_0: mu >= 0. When alternative = "greater"
, the null hypothesis
is H_0: mu <= 0. Confidence intervals for the
difference in location are available (except for oneway_test
) and
computed according to Bauer (1972).
If x
is an ordered factor, the default scores, 1:nlevels(x)
, can
be altered using the scores
argument (see
independence_test
); this argument can also be used to coerce
nominal factors to class "ordered"
. In this case, a linear-by-linear
association test is computed and the direction of the alternative hypothesis
can be specified using the alternative
argument.
The Brown-Mood median test offers a choice of mid-score, i.e., the score
assigned to observations exactly equal to the median. In the two-sample case,
mid-score = "0"
implies that the linear test statistic is simply the
number of subjects in the second sample with observations greater than the
median of the pooled sample. Similarly, the linear test statistic for the
last alternative, mid-score = "1"
, is the number of subjects in the
second sample with observations greater than or equal to the median of the
pooled sample. If mid-score = "0.5"
is selected, the linear test
statistic is the mean of the test statistics corresponding to the first and
last alternatives and has a symmetric distribution, or at least approximately
so, under the null hypothesis (see Hájek, Šidák
and Sen, 1999, pp. 97–98).
The conditional null distribution of the test statistic is used to obtain
p-values and an asymptotic approximation of the exact distribution is
used by default (distribution = "asymptotic"
). Alternatively, the
distribution can be approximated via Monte Carlo resampling or computed
exactly for univariate two-sample problems by setting distribution
to
"approximate"
or "exact"
respectively. See
asymptotic
, approximate
and exact
for details.
An object inheriting from class "IndependenceTest"
.
Confidence intervals can be extracted by confint.
Starting with version 1.1-0, oneway_test
no longer allows the test
statistic to be specified; a quadratic form is now used in the K-sample
case. Please use independence_test
if more control is desired.
Bauer, D. F. (1972). Constructing confidence sets using rank statistics. Journal of the American Statistical Association 67(339), 687–690. doi: 10.1080/01621459.1972.10481279
Hájek, J., Šidák, Z. and Sen, P. K. (1999). Theory of Rank Tests, Second Edition. San Diego: Academic Press.
Hollander, M. and Wolfe, D. A. (1999). Nonparametric Statistical Methods, Second Edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
## Tritiated Water Diffusion Across Human Chorioamnion ## Hollander and Wolfe (1999, p. 110, Tab. 4.1) diffusion <- data.frame( pd = c(0.80, 0.83, 1.89, 1.04, 1.45, 1.38, 1.91, 1.64, 0.73, 1.46, 1.15, 0.88, 0.90, 0.74, 1.21), age = factor(rep(c("At term", "12-26 Weeks"), c(10, 5))) ) ## Exact Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test ## Hollander and Wolfe (1999, p. 111) ## (At term - 12-26 Weeks) (wt <- wilcox_test(pd ~ age, data = diffusion, distribution = "exact", conf.int = TRUE)) ## Extract observed Wilcoxon statistic ## Note: this is the sum of the ranks for age = "12-26 Weeks" statistic(wt, type = "linear") ## Expectation, variance, two-sided pvalue and confidence interval expectation(wt) covariance(wt) pvalue(wt) confint(wt) ## For two samples, the Kruskal-Wallis test is equivalent to the W-M-W test kruskal_test(pd ~ age, data = diffusion, distribution = "exact") ## Asymptotic Fisher-Pitman test oneway_test(pd ~ age, data = diffusion) ## Approximative (Monte Carlo) Fisher-Pitman test pvalue(oneway_test(pd ~ age, data = diffusion, distribution = approximate(nresample = 10000))) ## Exact Fisher-Pitman test pvalue(ot <- oneway_test(pd ~ age, data = diffusion, distribution = "exact")) ## Plot density and distribution of the standardized test statistic op <- par(no.readonly = TRUE) # save current settings layout(matrix(1:2, nrow = 2)) s <- support(ot) d <- dperm(ot, s) p <- pperm(ot, s) plot(s, d, type = "S", xlab = "Test Statistic", ylab = "Density") plot(s, p, type = "S", xlab = "Test Statistic", ylab = "Cum. Probability") par(op) # reset ## Example data ex <- data.frame( y = c(3, 4, 8, 9, 1, 2, 5, 6, 7), x = factor(rep(c("no", "yes"), c(4, 5))) ) ## Boxplots boxplot(y ~ x, data = ex) ## Exact Brown-Mood median test with different mid-scores (mt1 <- median_test(y ~ x, data = ex, distribution = "exact")) (mt2 <- median_test(y ~ x, data = ex, distribution = "exact", mid.score = "0.5")) (mt3 <- median_test(y ~ x, data = ex, distribution = "exact", mid.score = "1")) # sign change! ## Plot density and distribution of the standardized test statistics op <- par(no.readonly = TRUE) # save current settings layout(matrix(1:3, nrow = 3)) s1 <- support(mt1); d1 <- dperm(mt1, s1) plot(s1, d1, type = "h", main = "Mid-score: 0", xlab = "Test Statistic", ylab = "Density") s2 <- support(mt2); d2 <- dperm(mt2, s2) plot(s2, d2, type = "h", main = "Mid-score: 0.5", xlab = "Test Statistic", ylab = "Density") s3 <- support(mt3); d3 <- dperm(mt3, s3) plot(s3, d3, type = "h", main = "Mid-score: 1", xlab = "Test Statistic", ylab = "Density") par(op) # reset ## Length of YOY Gizzard Shad ## Hollander and Wolfe (1999, p. 200, Tab. 6.3) yoy <- data.frame( length = c(46, 28, 46, 37, 32, 41, 42, 45, 38, 44, 42, 60, 32, 42, 45, 58, 27, 51, 42, 52, 38, 33, 26, 25, 28, 28, 26, 27, 27, 27, 31, 30, 27, 29, 30, 25, 25, 24, 27, 30), site = gl(4, 10, labels = as.roman(1:4)) ) ## Approximative (Monte Carlo) Kruskal-Wallis test kruskal_test(length ~ site, data = yoy, distribution = approximate(nresample = 10000)) ## Approximative (Monte Carlo) Nemenyi-Damico-Wolfe-Dunn test (joint ranking) ## Hollander and Wolfe (1999, p. 244) ## (where Steel-Dwass results are given) it <- independence_test(length ~ site, data = yoy, distribution = approximate(nresample = 50000), ytrafo = function(data) trafo(data, numeric_trafo = rank_trafo), xtrafo = mcp_trafo(site = "Tukey")) ## Global p-value pvalue(it) ## Sites (I = II) != (III = IV) at alpha = 0.01 (p. 244) pvalue(it, method = "single-step") # subset pivotality is violated
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