F-Statistic: Difference between revisions
From charlesreid1
(Created page with "=Intro= The F-statistic can be thought of as a frequentist metric for hypothesis-testing. Once an F-statistic and corresponding p-value is calculated from ANOVA (see [[Response...") |
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An example is a <math>p</math> parameter model and a reduced <math>k < p</math> parameter model. | An example is a <math>p</math> parameter model and a reduced <math>k < p</math> parameter model. | ||
=See Also= | |||
I found this short YouTube video very helpful for illustrating what the F-statistic means physically: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMwSS8DAVYk | I found this short YouTube video very helpful for illustrating what the F-statistic means physically: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMwSS8DAVYk | ||
Latest revision as of 19:33, 1 July 2011
Intro
The F-statistic can be thought of as a frequentist metric for hypothesis-testing. Once an F-statistic and corresponding p-value is calculated from ANOVA (see Response Surface Methodology#Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) Table, you can determine how confident you can be in a given hypothesis test.
The hypothesis can be the significance of a set of terms, or something else (...)
An example is a $ p $ parameter model and a reduced $ k < p $ parameter model.
See Also
I found this short YouTube video very helpful for illustrating what the F-statistic means physically: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMwSS8DAVYk
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