Thank you for your response. I think you have misunderstood what I'm asking, though.
On 2007-11-23, Emmanuel Charpentier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > - Tukey HSD will enable you to test the p(p-1)/2 pair differences one > can create with p groups ; > - Dunnett's procedure is made to compare (p-1) "treatments" to a common > control ; > - Scheffé's procedure is applicable to *any* ("reasonable") set of > contrasts you can form ; > - Newman-Keuls : aims to create separate subset of groups (but has > serious conceptual and technical flaws ! Don't do that nunless you know > what you're doing...). > - etc ... > > You'll have to refer to the subject matter to make a choice. Of course. I also have to know which function in R corresponds to which test, which is my main question. > Google ("multiple comparisons") will offer you some dubious and quite a > few good references... I have indeed found many dubious and a few good references to multiple comparisons, both from google and r-site-search. Many posts in the archive, including one made today in response to another question of mine, point to glht as the appropriate function to use in R. However, I don't know what exactly glht does, and the help file is extremely terse. It offers the following options (in contrMat()): contrMat(n, type=c("Dunnett", "Tukey", "Sequen", "AVE", "Changepoint", "Williams", "Marcus", "McDermott"), base = 1) The only reference to the source of these tests is: Frank Bretz, Alan Genz and Ludwig A. Hothorn (2001), On the numerical availability of multiple comparison procedures. _Biometrical Journal_, *43*(5), 645-656. This is a very technical paper, which as far as I can follow, is primarily a discussion of the numerical methods involved in calculating these contrasts, rather than the contrasts themselves. I can't decide which one is appropriate without knowing what the differences are. Dunnett seems pretty straightforward. Tukey, I think, may refer to what is referred to as the Tukey-Kramer test in other sources? Are any of them related to Scheffe? I have no idea. None of them are related to Newman-Keuls, as several archive messages make very clear that this is not a valid comparison to use, so R doesn't implement it. What I need is a reference to the tests implemented in glht, so I can decide which one is appropriate for my data. Sequen, Changepoint et al. may be common terms in some fields, but not in the references I'm working from. Thanks, Tyler ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.