One-Way ANOVA
One-Way Analysis of Variance
F-Distribution
Let s 2 and s 2 represent the sample variances of two different populations. If both
1 2
populations are normal and the population variances are equal, then the
sampling distribution of
σ 12 a n d σ 22
s 12
F 2
is called an F-distribution. s2
There are several properties of this distribution.
1. The F-distribution is a family of curves each of which is
determined by two types of degrees of freedom: the degrees
of freedom corresponding to the variance in the numerator,
denoted d.f.N, and the degrees of freedom corresponding to
the variance in the denominator, denoted d.f.D. Continued.
F-Distribution
Properties of the F-distribution continued:
2. F-distributions are positively skewed.
3. The total area under each curve of an F-distribution is equal
to 1.
4. F-values are always greater than or equal to 0.
5. For all F-distributions, the mean value of F is approximately
equal to 1.
d.f.N = 1 and d.f.D = 8
d.f.N = 8 and d.f.D = 26
d.f.N = 16 and d.f.D = 7
d.f.N = 3 and d.f.D = 11
F
1 2 3 4
Analysis of
Variance3e`1`
A analysis of variance is a technique that
partitions the total sum of squares of
deviations of the observations about their
mean into portions associated with
independent variables in the experiment
and a portion associated with error
One-Way ANOVA
The one-way analysis of variance is used
to test the claim that three or more
population means are equal
This is an extension of the two
independent samples t-test
One-Way ANOVA
The response variable is the variable
you’re comparing
The factor variable is the categorical
variable being used to define the groups
We will assume k samples (groups)
The one-way is because each value is
classified in exactly one way
Examples include comparisons by gender,
race, political party, color, etc.
One-Way ANOVA
Conditions or Assumptions
The data are randomly sampled
The variances of each sample are assumed
equal
The residuals are normally distributed
One-Way ANOVA F-Test
Assumptions
1. Randomness & Independence of
Errors
2. Normality
Populations (for each condition) are
Normally Distributed
3. Homogeneity of Variance
Populations (for each condition) have Equal
Variances
One-Way ANOVA
The null hypothesis is that the means are all
equal
H :
0 1 2 3 k
The alternative hypothesis is that at least one
of the means is different
Think about the Sesame Street® game where
three of these things are kind of the same, but one
of these things is not like the other. They don’t all
have to be different, just one of them.
One-Way ANOVA F-Test
Hypotheses
H0: 1 = 2 = 3 = ... =
p
All Population
Means are Equal
No Treatment Effect
Ha: Not All j Are
Equal
At Least 1 Pop.
Mean is Different
Treatment Effect
NOT ...
One-Way ANOVA F-Test
Hypotheses
H0: 1 = 2 = 3 = ... = p
All Population Means f(X)
are Equal
No Treatment Effect
X
1 = 2 = 3
Ha: Not All j Are Equal
At Least 1 Pop. Mean is
Different f(X)
Treatment Effect
NOT 1 = 2 = ... = p
Or i ≠ j for some i, j. X
1 = 2 3
One-Way ANOVA
Basic Idea
1. Compares 2 Types of Variation to
Test
Equality of Means
2. If Treatment Variation Is Significantly
Greater Than Random Variation then
Means Are Not Equal
3.Variation Measures Are Obtained by
‘Partitioning’ Total Variation
One-Way ANOVA
Partitions Total Variation
Total variation
Variation due to
treatment
One-Way ANOVA
Partitions Total Variation
Total variation
Variation due to Variation due to
treatment random sampling
One-Way ANOVA
Partitions Total Variation
Total variation
Variation due to Variation due to
treatment random sampling
Sum of Squares Among
Sum of Squares Between
Sum of Squares Treatment
Among Groups Variation
One-Way ANOVA
Partitions Total Variation
Total variation
Variation due to Variation due to
treatment random sampling
Sum of Squares Among Sum of Squares Within
Sum of Squares Between Sum of Squares Error
Sum of Squares (SSE)
Treatment (SST) Within Groups Variation
Among Groups Variation
One-Way ANOVA
The statistics classroom is divided into
three rows: front, middle, and back
The instructor noticed that the further the
students were from him, the more likely
they were to miss class or use an instant
messenger during class
He wanted to see if the students further
away did worse on the exams
One-Way ANOVA
The ANOVA doesn’t test that one mean is less
than another, only whether they’re all equal or
at least one is different.
H :
0 F M B
One-Way ANOVA
A random sample of the students in each
row was taken
The score for those students on the
second exam was recorded
Front: 82, 83, 97, 93, 55, 67, 53
Middle: 83, 78, 68, 61, 77, 54, 69, 51, 63
Back: 38, 59, 55, 66, 45, 52, 52, 61
Question: At the .05 level, is there a difference
in mean in each row?
One-Way ANOVA
The summary statistics for the grades of each row
are shown in the table below
Row Front Middle Back
Sample size 7 9 8
Mean 75.71 67.11 53.50
St. Dev 17.63 10.95 8.96
Variance 310.90 119.86 80.29
One-Way ANOVA
Variation
Variation is the sum of the squares of the
deviations between a value and the mean of
the value
Sum of Squares is abbreviated by SS and
often followed by a variable in parentheses
such as SS(B) or SS(W) so we know which
sum of squares we’re talking about
One-Way ANOVA
Are all of the values identical?
No, so there is some variation in the data
This is called the total variation
Denoted SS(Total) for the total Sum of
Squares (variation)
Sum of Squares is another name for variation
One-Way ANOVA
Are all of the sample means identical?
No, so there is some variation between the
groups
This is called the between group variation
Sometimes called the variation due to the
factor
Denoted SS(B) for Sum of Squares (variation)
between the groups
One-Way ANOVA
Are each of the values within each group
identical?
No, there is some variation within the groups
This is called the within group variation
Sometimes called the error variation
Denoted SS(W) for Sum of Squares
(variation) within the groups
One-Way ANOVA
There are two sources of variation
the variation between the groups, SS(B), or
the variation due to the factor
the variation within the groups, SS(W), or the
variation that can’t be explained by the factor
so it’s called the error variation
One-Way ANOVA
Here is the basic one-way ANOVA table
Source SS df MS F p
Between
Within
Total
One-Way ANOVA
Grand Mean k
The grand mean is the average of all the n x
x
i i
values when the factor is ignored i 1
k
It is a weighted average of the individual
n
sample means i
i 1
n x n x n x
x 1 1 2 2 k k
n n n 1 2 k
One-Way ANOVA
Between Group Variation, SS(B)
The between group variation is the variation between
each sample mean and the grand mean
Each individual variation is weighted by the sample
size
SS B n x x
k 2
i i
i 1
SS B n x x n x x n x x
2 2 2
1 1 2 2 k k
One-Way ANOVA
Within Group Variation, SS(W)
The Within Group Variation is the weighted total of
the individual variations
The weighting is done with the degrees of freedom
The df for each sample is one less than the sample
size for that sample.
One-Way ANOVA
Within Group Variation
SS W df s
k
2
i i
i 1
SS W df s df s df s
2
1 1 2
2
2 k
2
k
Total Variation
SS Total Y11 Y Y21 Y Yij Y
2 2 2
Response, Y
Y
Group 1 Group 2 Group 3
Treatment Variation
SST n1 Y1 Y n2 Y2 Y n p Y p Y
2 2 2
Response, Y
Y3
Y
Y2
Y1
Group 1 Group 2 Group 3
Random (Error) Variation
SSE Y11 Y1 Y21 Y1 Y pj Y p
2 2 2
Response, Y
Y3
Y2
Y1
Group 1 Group 2 Group 3
One-Way ANOVA F-Test
Test Statistic
1. Test Statistic STT / p 1
F = MST / MSE
SSE / n p
MST Is Mean Square for Treatment
MSE Is Mean Square for Error
2. Degrees of Freedom
1 = p -1
2 = n - p
p = # Populations, Groups, or Levels
n = Total Sample Size
One-Way ANOVA
Summary Table
Source of Degrees Sum of Mean F
Variation of Squares Square
Freedom (Variance)
Treatment p-1 SST MST = MST
SST/(p - 1) MSE
Error n-p SSE MSE =
SSE/(n - p)
Total n-1 SS(Total) =
SST+SSE
One-Way ANOVA F-Test Critical
Value
If means are equal,
F = MST / MSE 1.
Only reject large F! Reject H0
Do Not
Reject H0
0 F
Fa ( p1, np)
Always One-Tail!
One-Way ANOVA
Variances
The variances are also called the Mean of the
Squares and abbreviated by MS, often with an
accompanying variable MS(B) or MS(W)
They are an average squared deviation from the
mean and are found by dividing the variation by the
degrees of freedom
MS = SS / df
Variation
Variance
df
One-Way ANOVA
Special Variances
The MS(Within) is also known as the pooled
estimate of the variance since it is a weighted
average of the individual variances
Sometimes abbreviated s 2
p
The MS(Total) is the variance of the response
variable.
Not technically part of ANOVA table, but useful none the
less
One-Way ANOVA
Adding F to the table …
Source SS df MS F p
Between 1902 2 951.0 5.9
Within 3386 21 161.2
Total 5288 23 229.9
One-Way ANOVA F-Test
Example
As a vet epidemiologist you Food1 Food2 Food3
want to see if 3 food 25.40 23.40 20.00
supplements have different 26.31 21.80 22.20
mean milk yields. You assign 24.10 23.50 19.75
15 cows, 5 per food 23.74 22.75 20.60
supplement. 25.10 21.60 20.40
Question: At the .05 level, is
there a difference in mean
yields?
Performing a One-Way ANOVA Test
Example:
The following table shows the salaries of randomly selected individuals from four
large cities in Ethiopia. At = 0.05, can you conclude that the mean salary is
different in at least one of the areas?
Addis Ababa Hawassa Adama Bahir Dar
27,800 30,000 32,000 30,000
28,000 33,900 35,800 40,000
25,500 29,750 28,000 35,000
29,150 25,000 38,900 33,000
30,295 34,055 27,245 29,805
Continued.