[R] dixon test
giov
biowoman at libero.it
Wed Aug 13 16:21:25 CEST 2008
Thank you so much, I have not much experience on outliers =), I thought that
there were nonparametric distribution-free outliers test =(. What is the
most general distribution I can use? I did histogram of my data set and
sometimes normal distribution seems to occur, sometimes an uniform
distribution seems to occur. So, I cannot understand what distribution I can
use for my whole data set....
S Ellison wrote:
>
>
>
>>>> giov <biowoman at libero.it> 13/08/2008 10:59:32 >>>
>
>> just a question...I don't know
>>what is the distribution of my data (normal, T, etc...). So, how can I
> set
>>the type parameter?
>
> You must assume an underlying distribution or you can't do an outlier
> test.
>
> Outliers are just unusually extreme data points. They can only be
> considered 'unusual' if there is some basis - a distribution assumption
> - for deciding what is 'usual'. The assumed underlying distribution
> describes what is expected to be 'usual'.
>
> With no distribution assumption, there is no basis for considering any
> data point unusual, so the idea of an outlier really has no meaning.
>
> Steve E
>
>
>
>
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