Researchers are commonly interested in comparing the means of independent groups when distributions are nonnormal and variances are unequal. Robust means modeling (RMM) has been proposed as an alternative to ANOVA-type procedures when the assumptions of normality and variance homogeneity are violated. This paper extends work comparing the Type I error and power rates of RMM to those for the trimmed Welch procedure. A Monte Carlo study was used to investigate RMM and the trimmed Welch procedure under several conditions of nonnormality and variance heterogeneity. Our results suggest that the trimmed Welch provides a better balance of Type I error control and power than RMM.Social Sciences and Humanities Research Counci
Traditional analysis-of-variance (ANOVA) is based on ‘normality’ and ‘homogeneity’ assumptions. If e...
Several tests for group mean equality have been suggested for analyzing nonnormal and heteroscedasti...
The ANOVA-F test is the most popular and commonly used procedure for comparing J independent groups....
The study describes the various alternatives to the between-subjects ANOVA F test that have been per...
The study describes the various alternatives to the between-subjects ANOVA F test that have been per...
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) is a robust test against the normality assumption, but it may be inappr...
Although the Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) F test is one of the most popular statistical tools to com...
When the assumptions of normality and homoscedasticity are met, researchers should have no doubt in ...
The ANOVA F is a widely used statistic in psychological research despite its shortcomings when the a...
The ANOVA F is a widely used statistic in psychological research despite its shortcomings when the a...
Seven test statistics known to be robust to the combined effects of nonnormality and variance hetero...
Seven test statistics known to be robust to the combined effects of nonnormality and variance hetero...
The data obtained from one-way independent groups designs is typically non-normal inform and rarely ...
The comparison of two means is one of the most commonly applied statistical procedures in psychology...
Standard least squares analysis of variance methods suffer from poor power under arbitrarily small d...
Traditional analysis-of-variance (ANOVA) is based on ‘normality’ and ‘homogeneity’ assumptions. If e...
Several tests for group mean equality have been suggested for analyzing nonnormal and heteroscedasti...
The ANOVA-F test is the most popular and commonly used procedure for comparing J independent groups....
The study describes the various alternatives to the between-subjects ANOVA F test that have been per...
The study describes the various alternatives to the between-subjects ANOVA F test that have been per...
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) is a robust test against the normality assumption, but it may be inappr...
Although the Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) F test is one of the most popular statistical tools to com...
When the assumptions of normality and homoscedasticity are met, researchers should have no doubt in ...
The ANOVA F is a widely used statistic in psychological research despite its shortcomings when the a...
The ANOVA F is a widely used statistic in psychological research despite its shortcomings when the a...
Seven test statistics known to be robust to the combined effects of nonnormality and variance hetero...
Seven test statistics known to be robust to the combined effects of nonnormality and variance hetero...
The data obtained from one-way independent groups designs is typically non-normal inform and rarely ...
The comparison of two means is one of the most commonly applied statistical procedures in psychology...
Standard least squares analysis of variance methods suffer from poor power under arbitrarily small d...
Traditional analysis-of-variance (ANOVA) is based on ‘normality’ and ‘homogeneity’ assumptions. If e...
Several tests for group mean equality have been suggested for analyzing nonnormal and heteroscedasti...
The ANOVA-F test is the most popular and commonly used procedure for comparing J independent groups....