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MRT
MRT
Level I

Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

Hi everyone,

I'm starting to use JMP and I'm doing an ANOVA, using four groups. I created the diamond-shaped means and noticed that the diamonds have the same size for all 4 groups. However, the groups are quite different regarding the distribution of their samples. I also noticed that the CI has the same range for all groups (Upper 95% - Lower 95%). 

 

Is this how is supposed to be or do I have to change any settings?

In attachamend you can find a print of my data.
Thank you!

Screen Shot 2018-04-30 at 15.05.27.png

9 REPLIES 9
txnelson
Super User

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

Assuming that you used the Fit Y by X platform, would it be posible for you to display the means and standard deviation table?

Jim
MRT
MRT
Level I

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

Yes, I did use the Fit Y by X.

 

In attachement there are both the mean and standard deviation table, as well as the means for oneway anova table.

mean and standard dev.pngMeans for oneway anova.png

julian
Community Manager Community Manager

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

Hi @MRT,

The analysis of variance relies on a pooled within-cell error term (the mean square error of the model) as the estimate of the population variance (which is one reason why the assumption of homogeneity of variance is important for an ANOVA). The implication of this is that confidence intervals formed around individual means use the same estimate of the population variance to calculate the standard error, so if you have the same number of individuals in each group you will then have confidence intervals of the same width. I hope this helps!

@julian

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

You might have gotten the impression that "the groups are quite different regarding their distribution," but you can test that hypothesis with the ANOVA command (test for means not all equal) and with the Unequal Variance command (test for standard deviations not all equal).

Each group of data is a small sample from the five populations, so the evidence for any difference (mean or standard deviation) might be relatively weak.

AnnaMills
Level I

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

This was really helpful but could you further expand on how I would interpret that?

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

The ANOVA tests the null hypothesis that all the means are equal versus the alternative hypothesis that they are not all equal. The method assumes that the within group variance is the same and pools the estimate of this variance. This assumption in turn leads to width of the confidence intervals and the height of the mean diamonds (graphic for CI) to be the same.

 

The Unequal Variance command will test this assumption. If the variances are significantly different, then you should not use the ANOVA result or the mean diamonds to decide about the hypotheses. The same command also performs the Welsh version of the procedure that adjusts for the difference in the variances.

AnnaMills
Level I

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

Many thanks, My confusion stems from the mutitude of different tests on the "tests that variances are equal" report.  I have o'brien, brow-Forsythe etc.  I am not sure which of those tests is relevant or how I should interpret those( all are greater than 0.05)  I also have Welch's test at the bottom which  has a prob > F of 0.0187

txnelson
Super User

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

You can get much of what you want by looking at the Help screen for the "Test that the Variances are Equal" output.  Go to the Pull Down Menus for the output page (it will be hidden behind the bar that goes all the way across the top of the window) and select the "?" tool.  Then move to the report you want to see help on, and click on it.  JMP will open up the help page for that output.

Jim

Re: Oneway ANOVA - Means for Oneway Anova

(Amended 2/22/19)

 

We recommend that you use the Levene test if the errors are symmetrically distributed, the Brown-Forsythe test otherwise.

 

That recommendation is based on simulation studies to maximize the power of the test. (I.e. lowest type II error rate or false negative rate.)