Book contents
- Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
- Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- I Basic Statistical Concepts
- II The Right Statistical Test for Different Types of Data
- 4 Analyzing Continuous Data
- 5 Analyzing Non-normally Distributed, Continuous Data: Non-parametric Tests
- 6 Analyses for Non-continuous Data
- 7 Analyzing a Combination of Data Types When the Outcome is Binary
- III Applied Statistics
- Glossary
- Figure Credits
- Index
6 - Analyses for Non-continuous Data
from II - The Right Statistical Test for Different Types of Data
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 June 2021
- Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
- Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and Clinicians
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- I Basic Statistical Concepts
- II The Right Statistical Test for Different Types of Data
- 4 Analyzing Continuous Data
- 5 Analyzing Non-normally Distributed, Continuous Data: Non-parametric Tests
- 6 Analyses for Non-continuous Data
- 7 Analyzing a Combination of Data Types When the Outcome is Binary
- III Applied Statistics
- Glossary
- Figure Credits
- Index
Summary
A contingency table is a table that shows the distribution of one variable within categories of another, like gender vs. disease/no disease. These tables can be 2 × 2, 2 × 3, 2 × 4 (if you were to examine gender by race, for example), 2 × 6, etc. The second variable can have two values (such as yes or no) or three or more values like race (White, African American, Asian, etc.). When examining a 2 × 2 table like disease by gender, one would test for statistical significance using chi-square (χ) analysis. However, like ANOVA (Section 4.3.2), when including a variable that has more than two categories, like race, you can run the χ statistic but there are so many resulting cells, you won’t really know where the statistical differences lie since you are examining so many categories at once.
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- Statistics for Laboratory Scientists and CliniciansA Practical Guide, pp. 85 - 96Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021