You can find the spreadsheets for this video and some additional materials here: drive.google.com/drive/folders/1sP40IW0p0w5IETCgo464uhDFfdyR6rh7 Please consider supporting NEDL on Patreon: www.patreon.com/NEDLeducation
Hi Felipe, and thanks for the question! Yes, you can! It would be preferable to use Chow-Denning if the tests are independent, and Wilson harmonic mean if they are not.
You can find the spreadsheets for this video and some additional materials here: drive.google.com/drive/folders/1sP40IW0p0w5IETCgo464uhDFfdyR6rh7
Please consider supporting NEDL on Patreon: www.patreon.com/NEDLeducation
This was a great and convenient tutorial, tks for that. Can I use these to test the significance of several "one-proportion z-tests" ?
Hi Felipe, and thanks for the question! Yes, you can! It would be preferable to use Chow-Denning if the tests are independent, and Wilson harmonic mean if they are not.
@@NEDLeducation In my case the tests are dependent. Thank you very much.
can you mention your reference for your formula?
also why do you rank descending instead of ascending? most references that I read using ascending order