Hi,
I'm new to JMP and I'm using for my master thesis. I have previously used Statview which was a much smaller programe and easier to use. I will start to do the easy part with constructing the descriptive statistics, like how many articles were published on different weekdays during the five years I have studied. It's pretty easy to get the values and percentage, but the p-value? I know that my teacher will demand me to have that in the thesis. There is something called StdErr Prob, is that the same thing as P-value? And if so it seems to calculate it only for each weekday and not the total p-value because that is only given as 0,000000000.
And in my last thesis I used something called Cramer's V, that doesn't seem to exist but it is maybe called something else in JMP?
I hope some helpful soul could give some tips
yours
ed
The StdErr Prob is not the same as the p-value. p-values are generally labeled as Prob > Chisq or Prob > t. How to find the p-value for your analysis will depend on the platform you are using. You can find information in the JMP documentation, in this case most likely the Basic Analysis book, which can be found by selecting Help -> Books -> Basic Analysis. You can also find the documentation on the JMP website: https://www.jmp.com/en_us/support/online-help.html.
Cramer's V statistic is not given automatically in JMP. However, JMP does provide the necessary statistics in the Contingency platform to compute it by hand.
For 2x2 tables, V = (n11*n22 - n12*n21)/sqrt(n1.*n2.*n.1*n.2) , where n.i are the column totals and ni. are the row totals.
For other size tables, V = sqrt [(Qp/n)/min(R-1,C-1)] (where Qp=Pearson Chi-square statistic, R is the number of rows, and C is the number of columns).
The StdErr Prob is not the same as the p-value. p-values are generally labeled as Prob > Chisq or Prob > t. How to find the p-value for your analysis will depend on the platform you are using. You can find information in the JMP documentation, in this case most likely the Basic Analysis book, which can be found by selecting Help -> Books -> Basic Analysis. You can also find the documentation on the JMP website: https://www.jmp.com/en_us/support/online-help.html.
Cramer's V statistic is not given automatically in JMP. However, JMP does provide the necessary statistics in the Contingency platform to compute it by hand.
For 2x2 tables, V = (n11*n22 - n12*n21)/sqrt(n1.*n2.*n.1*n.2) , where n.i are the column totals and ni. are the row totals.
For other size tables, V = sqrt [(Qp/n)/min(R-1,C-1)] (where Qp=Pearson Chi-square statistic, R is the number of rows, and C is the number of columns).