Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Getting Started
- Part I Why We Use Statistics
- Part II How to Use Statistics
- 5 Planning Your Statistical Analysis
- 6 A Cautionary Tail: Why You Should Not Do a One-Tailed Test
- 7 Is This Normal?
- 8 Sorting Out Outliers
- 9 Power and Two Types of Error
- 10 Using Non-Parametric Tests
- 11 A Robust t-Test
- 12 The ANOVA Family and Friends
- 13 Exploring, Over-Testing and Fishing
- 14 When Is a Correlation Not a Correlation?
- 15 What Makes a Good Likert Item?
- 16 The Meaning of Factors
- 17 Unreliable Reliability: The Problem of Cronbach’s Alpha
- 18 Tests for Questionnaires
- Index
12 - The ANOVA Family and Friends
from Part II - How to Use Statistics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 January 2019
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Getting Started
- Part I Why We Use Statistics
- Part II How to Use Statistics
- 5 Planning Your Statistical Analysis
- 6 A Cautionary Tail: Why You Should Not Do a One-Tailed Test
- 7 Is This Normal?
- 8 Sorting Out Outliers
- 9 Power and Two Types of Error
- 10 Using Non-Parametric Tests
- 11 A Robust t-Test
- 12 The ANOVA Family and Friends
- 13 Exploring, Over-Testing and Fishing
- 14 When Is a Correlation Not a Correlation?
- 15 What Makes a Good Likert Item?
- 16 The Meaning of Factors
- 17 Unreliable Reliability: The Problem of Cronbach’s Alpha
- 18 Tests for Questionnaires
- Index
Summary
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) is a family of tests widely used in HCI but these tests are not as robust as claimed by those who use them. This chapter looks at exactly what ANOVAs are testing and therefore what makes suitable robust alternatives to ANOVA when the assumptions of ANOVA are not met.
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- Doing Better Statistics in Human-Computer Interaction , pp. 139 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019