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Dixon Test
I am looking for a way to automate the Dixon Test for determining outliers in
a data set in an Excel spreadsheet. |
Dixon Test
Kevin -
Referring to http://www.statistics4u.info/fundsta...ts_dixon.html# it's a simple matter to compute the test statistic Q using Excel's ABS, MIN, MAX, and LARGE or SMALL worksheet functions. But I don't have access to a source that describes how to compute the sampling distribution of Q for determining a p-value or conducting a hypothesis test. - Mike http://www.mikemiddleton.com "Kevin Clark" <Kevin wrote in message ... I am looking for a way to automate the Dixon Test for determining outliers in a data set in an Excel spreadsheet. |
Dixon Test
Thanks for a reference that I hadn't seen before. The algorithm for
selecting among Dixon-type statistics based on sample size is endorsed by ASTM (E-178). http://www.jstatsoft.org/counter.php...16i03.pdf&ct=1 gives a method for calculating p-values by Gaussian-type quadrature. The abscissas and weights used there give about 3-place accuracy in the range of Dixon's tables. Note that the tables in your reference have not been previously published, and extend Dixon's tables to smaller p-values and larger n than Dixon published. The larger n may not be useful in practice since the range becomes a very inefficient estimator of variance for large n. However the accuracy of these tables is not bad. The author says they are based on Monte Carlo simulation with 10^6 reps per value. Around the turn of the century I calculated (by adaptive quadrature) unpublished Dixon tables that I believe to be accurate to 6 decimal places over an even broader range of p-values for n<=100. Comparing your reference to my tables, your reference seems to have an error of no more than 0.003 in its tabled values, which is better than Dixon's original tables. Jerry "Mike Middleton" wrote: Kevin - Referring to http://www.statistics4u.info/fundsta...ts_dixon.html# it's a simple matter to compute the test statistic Q using Excel's ABS, MIN, MAX, and LARGE or SMALL worksheet functions. But I don't have access to a source that describes how to compute the sampling distribution of Q for determining a p-value or conducting a hypothesis test. - Mike http://www.mikemiddleton.com "Kevin Clark" <Kevin wrote in message ... I am looking for a way to automate the Dixon Test for determining outliers in a data set in an Excel spreadsheet. |
Dixon Test
Note also, that these p-values are for 1-sided outlier tests, whereas outlier
testing is inherently 2-sided, unless there is some objective basis for believing that outliers can only occur in one direction. Thus for most cases, these p-values should be doubled, as in Rorabacher's tables (Analytical Chemistry 63[2]:139-146, 1991) and USP <111. Jerry "Mike Middleton" wrote: Kevin - Referring to http://www.statistics4u.info/fundsta...ts_dixon.html# it's a simple matter to compute the test statistic Q using Excel's ABS, MIN, MAX, and LARGE or SMALL worksheet functions. But I don't have access to a source that describes how to compute the sampling distribution of Q for determining a p-value or conducting a hypothesis test. - Mike http://www.mikemiddleton.com "Kevin Clark" <Kevin wrote in message ... I am looking for a way to automate the Dixon Test for determining outliers in a data set in an Excel spreadsheet. |
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