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Oats

Split-plot Experiment on Varieties of Oats


Description

The Oats data frame has 72 rows and 4 columns.

Format

This data frame contains the following columns:

Block

an ordered factor with levels VI < V < III < IV < II < I

Variety

a factor with levels Golden Rain Marvellous Victory

nitro

a numeric vector

yield

a numeric vector

Details

These data have been introduced by Yates (1935) as an example of a split-plot design. The treatment structure used in the experiment was a 3 x 4 full factorial, with three varieties of oats and four concentrations of nitrogen. The experimental units were arranged into six blocks, each with three whole-plots subdivided into four subplots. The varieties of oats were assigned randomly to the whole-plots and the concentrations of nitrogen to the subplots. All four concentrations of nitrogen were used on each whole-plot.

Source

Pinheiro, J. C. and Bates, D. M. (2000), Mixed-Effects Models in S and S-PLUS, Springer, New York. (Appendix A.15)

Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D. (2002) Modern Applied Statistics with S. (4th ed), Springer, New York.


nlme

Linear and Nonlinear Mixed Effects Models

v3.1-152
GPL (>= 2) | file LICENCE
Authors
José Pinheiro [aut] (S version), Douglas Bates [aut] (up to 2007), Saikat DebRoy [ctb] (up to 2002), Deepayan Sarkar [ctb] (up to 2005), EISPACK authors [ctb] (src/rs.f), Siem Heisterkamp [ctb] (Author fixed sigma), Bert Van Willigen [ctb] (Programmer fixed sigma), Johannes Ranke [ctb] (varConstProp()), R-core [aut, cre]
Initial release
2021-02-03

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