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  2. Studentized range distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studentized_range_distribution

    When only the equality of the two groups means is in question (i.e. whether μ 1 = μ 2), the studentized range distribution is similar to the Student's t distribution, differing only in that the first takes into account the number of means under consideration, and the critical value is adjusted accordingly. The more means under consideration ...

  3. Critical value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_value

    Critical value or threshold value can refer to: A quantitative threshold in medicine, chemistry and physics; Critical value (statistics), boundary of the acceptance region while testing a statistical hypothesis; Value of a function at a critical point (mathematics) Critical point (thermodynamics) of a statistical system.

  4. Cochran's C test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochran's_C_test

    Cochran's test, [1] named after William G. Cochran, is a one-sided upper limit variance outlier statistical test .The C test is used to decide if a single estimate of a variance (or a standard deviation) is significantly larger than a group of variances (or standard deviations) with which the single estimate is supposed to be comparable.

  5. Frequency of exceedance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_of_exceedance

    For a Gaussian process, the approximation that the number of peaks above the critical value and the number of upcrossings of the critical value are the same is good for y max /σ y > 2 and for narrow band noise. [1] For power spectral densities that decay less steeply than f −3 as f→∞, the integral in the numerator of N 0 does not converge.

  6. Comparison of statistical packages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_statistical...

    "A Short Preview of Free Statistical Software Packages for Teaching Statistics to Industrial Technology Majors" (PDF). Journal of Industrial Technology. 21 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2005.

  7. Hotelling's T-squared distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotelling's_T-squared...

    In statistics, particularly in hypothesis testing, the Hotelling's T-squared distribution (T 2), proposed by Harold Hotelling, [1] is a multivariate probability distribution that is tightly related to the F-distribution and is most notable for arising as the distribution of a set of sample statistics that are natural generalizations of the statistics underlying the Student's t-distribution.

  8. Hartley's test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartley's_test

    Hartley's test is related to Cochran's C test [6] [7] in which the test statistic is the ratio of max(s j 2) to the sum of all the group variances.Other tests related to these, have test statistics in which the within-group variances are replaced by the within-group range.

  9. Grubbs's test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grubbs's_test

    In statistics, Grubbs's test or the Grubbs test (named after Frank E. Grubbs, who published the test in 1950 [1]), also known as the maximum normalized residual test or extreme studentized deviate test, is a test used to detect outliers in a univariate data set assumed to come from a normally distributed population.