Looking for help: Statistical question
UPDATE: This is no longer the problem – the real problem is outlined here.
No use trying to hide it: I need to look everything up when doing simple statistics.
Perhaps you can help me with a simple question?
Here goes:
Let’s say you are convinced that Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays differ as to the amount of rainfall. To test this, you measure the amount of rainfall (in millimeters) on these three days over a period of six weeks.
You get (averages):
Monday: 10mm
Tuesday: 30mm
Wednesday: 15mm
I suppose the null hypothesis must be that the rainfall did not differ.
How do you express the strength of the difference in these three cases? That is: How certain are you that the measured difference is non-coincidental?
Help would be appreciated!
Dette indlæg ligner…
Final cut (06/05/2005)
Vancouver (03/02/2005)
Equilibrial (31/10/2005)
DIGRA paper wrapped and delivered (12/04/2005)
Games and gamers (28/06/2005)
Velkommen til disse ydmyge sider. Jeg hedder Jonas og arbejder som onlinespecialist hos Egmont. Tanker du måtte snuble over på denne blog er helt mine egne (i de tilfælde hvor jeg ikke bare har hugget dem fra andre).

Computerspil-grundbog på trapperne. Detaljer ovre på Facebook.Populærest
- Eksperimentet: Vold og computerspil
- Pia Kjærsgaard i Detektor
- Hvad ved du om uvidenhed?
- Computerspil skaber vold – ligesom børn …
- Fri sex og nye medier
- En forbløffende god bog om computerspil
- Den virale markedsførings eneste problem…
- Anmeldelse: Politikens iPhone-app
- PhD defense completed – get ready
- Man gjorde et onlineleksikon fortræd
Tag cloud
politiken Players' Realm anthology Persuasion Understanding Video Games Facebook Nye medier research webdesign Edward Castronova Computerspil Announcements/CfPs self-constraint Tillid anmeldelse digitale medier Undersøgelse ITU Second Life Personligt World of Warcraft bookmarks Akademia Min forskning Det Danske Filminstitut film webkommunikation Wordpress digital borgerinddragelse Simon Egenfeldt-Nielsen PhD











