A simulation study of the size and power of Cochran’s Q versus the standard Chi-square test for testing the equality of correlated proportions

Date

2010-05-04T13:49:47Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

The standard Chi-square test for the equality of proportions of positive responses to c specified binary questions is valid when the observed responses arise from independent random samples of units. When the responses to all c questions are recorded on the same unit, a situation called correlated proportions, the assumptions under which this test is derived are no longer valid. Under the additional assumption of compound symmetry, the Cochran-Q test is a valid test for the equality of proportions of positive responses. The purpose of this report is to use simulation to examine and compare the performance of the Cochran-Q test and the standard Chisquare test when testing for the equality of correlated proportions. It is found that the Cochran-Q test is superior to the Chi-square test in terms of size and power, especially when the common correlation among the binary responses is large.

Description

Keywords

Cochran's Q, Chi-Square, Binary Correlated Proportions, Power

Graduation Month

May

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Statistics

Major Professor

Paul I. Nelson

Date

2010

Type

Report

Citation