is it "legal" to use a one-way anova to check for significant
differences on a binary variable (e.g., gender)? i'm being lazy and trying to do one big anova run for all my dependent measures (separately, of course), rather than using t-tests for some... -- Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil Market Research Manager Publications and Marketing Cornell University 353 Pine Tree Rd. Ithaca, NY 14850 Email: [hidden email] Phone: 607 254-5467 |
Hi Dierdre,
Any analysis that can be done with a t-test can be done w/ANOVA. The F statistic from an ANOVA for a two group analysis will always equal the t statistic squared. The significance results will be the same. So, yes, it is "legal" and no statistical police will be issuing a warrant for your arrest. Best, Jeff Jeffrey D. Leitzel, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology Office: McCormick 2123 Bloomsburg University 400 East Second Street Bloomsburg, PA 17815 Office Phone:570-389-4232,fax:570-389-2019 Alt. Office (T & Th): 570 348-6100 ext:3216 -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2006 9:24 AM To: [hidden email] Subject: anova on binary variables is it "legal" to use a one-way anova to check for significant differences on a binary variable (e.g., gender)? i'm being lazy and trying to do one big anova run for all my dependent measures (separately, of course), rather than using t-tests for some... -- Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil Market Research Manager Publications and Marketing Cornell University 353 Pine Tree Rd. Ithaca, NY 14850 Email: [hidden email] Phone: 607 254-5467 |
In reply to this post by Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil
Stephen Brand
www.statisticsdoc.com Deidre, I assume that you are using Gender as an independent variable, not a dependent variable, that your dependent variables are interval scales, and that you are interested in knowing whether the means on these scales differ between males and females. I would suggest conducting a t-test instead of the one-way ANOVA in the event that the variances on some of the dependent variables are not equal for males and females. ANOVA assumes that the variances are equal across groups, while the t-test can be carried out without pooling unequal variances. Using the t-test will give you more accurate results. HTH, Stephen Brand ---- Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil <[hidden email]> wrote: > is it "legal" to use a one-way anova to check for significant > differences on a binary variable (e.g., gender)? > > i'm being lazy and trying to do one big anova run for all my > dependent measures (separately, of course), rather than using t-tests > for some... > > -- > Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil > Market Research Manager > Publications and Marketing > Cornell University > 353 Pine Tree Rd. > Ithaca, NY 14850 > > Email: [hidden email] > Phone: 607 254-5467 -- For personalized and experienced consulting in statistics and research design, visit www.statisticsdoc.com |
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