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#1
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Hello
Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#2
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Anita -
Search Excel's Help for "ttest" and for "scientific notation" or "scientific format." For more information about t-test, consult a statistics textbook. - Mike www.mikemiddleton.com "Anita" wrote in message ... Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#3
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Anita
The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#4
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Yes the explanation of Ttest is very helpful thanks.
But, I still don't understand why I have an E-15 at the end of the answer. If I change the number of decimal places to show 15 then I get a very small number; does this therefore mean that the two means are different because the value is significantly less than 0.05? The answer I get is something like 0.0000000000000234. Or do you think the formula is totally incorrect (I haven't checked it at this stage)? Would you expect to get an answer like this? Thanks again Anita "Alex" wrote: Anita The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#5
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Anita
The E-15 is just a shorthand way of writing the number 0.0000000000000234. So they are the same. A result like this can be achieved and so I 'presume' the formula is correct. Yes, your value is less than 0.05 and therefore is statistically significant on the face of it. To give more detailed answers I would have to know the nature of the inputs to the TTEST and what hypothesis is being tested. As an aside, the thing most likely to invalidate the interpretation of a TTEST is not the value that the TTEST function returns, but the actual nature of the data and the hypothesis being tested. So I wouldn't worry too much about the TTEST result...rather I would pay closer attention to the nature of the data being analysed...in order for a TTEST to be valid certain 'criteria' must be met otherwise the test maybe inappropriate... Hope this helps... Alex "Anita" wrote: Yes the explanation of Ttest is very helpful thanks. But, I still don't understand why I have an E-15 at the end of the answer. If I change the number of decimal places to show 15 then I get a very small number; does this therefore mean that the two means are different because the value is significantly less than 0.05? The answer I get is something like 0.0000000000000234. Or do you think the formula is totally incorrect (I haven't checked it at this stage)? Would you expect to get an answer like this? Thanks again Anita "Alex" wrote: Anita The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#6
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On Fri, 17 Jun 2005 04:53:07 -0700, "Anita"
wrote: Yes the explanation of Ttest is very helpful thanks. But, I still don't understand why I have an E-15 at the end of the answer. If I change the number of decimal places to show 15 then I get a very small number; does this therefore mean that the two means are different because the value is significantly less than 0.05? Assuming you have selected the ranges correctly, that's exactly what it means. (0.05 is not the only standard of comparison, but it's the most common. Assuming the two data sets are random samples, the E-15 days there's only about one chance in a thousand million million that the difference in the data sets could have come about by chance. The calculation of probability takes the sizes, averages, and scatter of the data sets into account. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com A: Maybe because some people are too annoyed by top-posting. Q: Why do I not get an answer to my question(s)? A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? |
#7
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Can you help me figure out if I'm interpreting the t-probability correctly?
I am comparing the means of 2 samples. With a 2-tailed test the probablility statistic is 0.173 & with a 1-tailed it is 0.087. My interpretation is that there is not a signigicant difference between the means using either the 1 or 2 tailed test. To be honest, I don't have a clue whether I should have used a 1 or 2 tailed test so I did both. Can you also tell which I should be using? In another comparison of the means of 2 samples, the probability statistic was 0.000346. I am interpreting this as a significant difference at the .03 CI. Is this correct? gbh "Alex" wrote: Anita The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#8
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Most testing should be considered 2-tailed. The exception is if you can
honestly say yes to either of the following questions: Before looking at the data, did you know which group MUST be larger if there was a difference? Before looking at the data, were you only interested in a difference if it was in a particular direction (and it then turned out to be in that direction)? p=0.087 means that there is less than a 1 in 10 chance of observing such an extreme difference (in the pre-specified direction) simply by chance if in fact there is no difference. It is not significant at the 0.05 level, but depending on your objectives, may be worth pursuing. Jerry "gbh" wrote: Can you help me figure out if I'm interpreting the t-probability correctly? I am comparing the means of 2 samples. With a 2-tailed test the probablility statistic is 0.173 & with a 1-tailed it is 0.087. My interpretation is that there is not a signigicant difference between the means using either the 1 or 2 tailed test. To be honest, I don't have a clue whether I should have used a 1 or 2 tailed test so I did both. Can you also tell which I should be using? In another comparison of the means of 2 samples, the probability statistic was 0.000346. I am interpreting this as a significant difference at the .03 CI. Is this correct? gbh "Alex" wrote: Anita The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
#9
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Thank Jerry that really helped me. I should have been using the 2 tailed
test so I'll go with that probability. I assume I did correctly interpret the probability of the second sample correctly that .000346 means a significant difference in the groups at the .03 level. Thank again, my stats classes were so long ago that I only know how to look up significance on a t table knowing the degrees of freedom! gbh "Jerry W. Lewis" wrote: Most testing should be considered 2-tailed. The exception is if you can honestly say yes to either of the following questions: Before looking at the data, did you know which group MUST be larger if there was a difference? Before looking at the data, were you only interested in a difference if it was in a particular direction (and it then turned out to be in that direction)? p=0.087 means that there is less than a 1 in 10 chance of observing such an extreme difference (in the pre-specified direction) simply by chance if in fact there is no difference. It is not significant at the 0.05 level, but depending on your objectives, may be worth pursuing. Jerry "gbh" wrote: Can you help me figure out if I'm interpreting the t-probability correctly? I am comparing the means of 2 samples. With a 2-tailed test the probablility statistic is 0.173 & with a 1-tailed it is 0.087. My interpretation is that there is not a signigicant difference between the means using either the 1 or 2 tailed test. To be honest, I don't have a clue whether I should have used a 1 or 2 tailed test so I did both. Can you also tell which I should be using? In another comparison of the means of 2 samples, the probability statistic was 0.000346. I am interpreting this as a significant difference at the .03 CI. Is this correct? gbh "Alex" wrote: Anita The TTEST function is a statistical test known as the t-test. Put simply, it compares the means of two samples to assess whether they differ significantly or not. The output is a probability value. In general a value less than 0.05 would indicate that the two means are different. For example, suppose you had two classes of schoolchildren, each of class size 30. Suppose they all took the same test and received a mark out of 100. A question may be to test whether the average (mean) mark for one class is significantly different than the other class. Class A ClassB 87 82 92 77 63 75 70 73 65 87 etc In Excel you may have column A1 as class A results and column B1 as class B results. The mean of class A maybe 80 and the mean of class B maybe 75 ( I am making these numbers up). So, does this suggest that the average results are signifcantly different? What you would do is... TTEST([input range for classA],{input range for classB], 2,2) And this will give a probability value e.g. 0.15. This means that the chance of observing those results would occur about 15% by chance anyway. Typically, a p-value of less than 0.05 (5%) is considered significant i.e. those results would only be obtained by chance 5% of the time. This is a very brief overview into a subject that has many nuances. This is a light overview. If that satisfies your curiousity then fine...if not then please do write back and I shall endeavour to explain further. Regards Alex "Anita" wrote: Hello Can someone explain what this function does? I have to do a support call for a customer and have never come across the Ttest function before. The answer that I have in the cell containing the function has got E-15 after it (which I don't understand either). I've also been asked how to calculate probability. The version is 2000 - I can supply more detail if the above isn't adequate. Many thanks for your help. Anita |
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