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In statistics, analysis of variance (ANOVA) is a collection of statistical models and their associated procedures which compare means by splitting the overall observed variance into different parts. The initial techniques of the analysis of variance were pioneered by the statistician and geneticist Ronald Fisher in the 1920s and 1930s. There are three conceptual classes of such models:
  1. The fixed effects model assumes that the data come from normal populations which differ in their means.
  2. Random effects models assume that the data describe a hierarchy of different populations whose differences are constrained by the hierarchy.
  3. Mixed models describe situations where both fixed and random effects are present.

The fundamental technique is a partitioning of the total sum of squares into components related to the effects in the model used. For example, we show the model for a simplified ANOVA with one type of treatment at different levels. (If the treatment levels are quantitative and the effects are linear, a linear regression analysis may be appropriate.)
The number of degrees of freedom (abbreviated '') can be partitioned in a similar way and specifies the Chi-square distribution which describes the associated sums of squares.

Table of contents
1 Fixed effects model
2 Random effects model
3 Degrees of freedom

Fixed effects model

The fixed effects model of analysis of variance applies to situations in which the experimenter has subjected his experimental material to several treatments, each of which affects only the mean of the underlying normal distribution of the response variable.

Random effects model

Random effects models are used to describe situations in which incomparable differences in experimental material occur. The simplest example is that of estimating the unknown mean of a population whose individuals differ from each other. In this case, the variation between individuals is confounded with that of the observing instrument.

Degrees of freedom

Degrees of freedom indicates the effective number of observations which contribute to the sum of squares in an ANOVA, the total number of observations minus the number of linear constraints in the data.

See also: ANCOVA

 

 

 

 

 

 






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