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The distribution used for the hypothesis test is a new one. It is called the F distribution , invented by George Snedecor but named in honor of Sir Ronald Fisher, an English statistician. The F statistic is a ratio (a fraction). There are two sets of degrees of freedom; one for the numerator and one for the denominator.
For example, if F follows an F distribution and the number of degrees of freedom for the numerator is four, and the number of degrees of freedom for the denominator is ten, then F ~ F 4,10 .
The F distribution is derived from the Student's t-distribution. The values of the F distribution are squares of the corresponding values of the t -distribution. One-Way ANOVA expands the t -test for comparing more than two groups. The scope of that derivation is beyond the level of this course.
To calculate the F ratio , two estimates of the variance are made.
To find a "sum of squares" means to add together squared quantities that, in some cases, may be weighted. We used sum of squares to calculate the sample variance andthe sample standard deviation in [link] .
MS means " mean square ." MS between is the variance between groups, and MS within is the variance within groups.
Calculation of Sum of Squares and Mean Square
MS between and MS within can be written as follows:
The one-way ANOVA test depends on the fact that MS between can be influenced by population differences among means of the several groups. Since MS within compares values of each group to its own group mean, the fact that group means might be different does not affect MS within .
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