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Sensitivity Comparisons among Tests of the General Linear Hypothesis
64
Citations
18
References
1966
Year
EconomicsEngineeringExpected Significance LevelComparative TestStatistical FoundationTest StatisticsBusinessEconometricsTest DerivationEsl CriterionSensitivity AnalysisStatistical InferenceExperimental TestingClassical Test TheorySensitivity ComparisonsTestabilityStatistics
Abstract The expected significance level (ESL) of a test, proposed by Dempster and Schatzoff (4) as a criterion for comparing sensitivities of competing test statistics, is defined as the expected value of the observed significance level under a simple alternative hypothesis. For example, the ESL of a lower tailed test of the hypothesis H 0: X∼F (x) against H 1: X∼G (x) is given by ñF(x)dG(x). In this paper, the sensitivities of several proposed tests of the general linear hypothesis are compared by simulating their ESL's under a wide variety of parameterizations. The results indicate that Wilks's likelihood ratio criterion A and Hotelling's T 0 2 provide about the same levels of protection over a wide spectrum of alternatives, whereas Roy's largest characteristic root is shown to be rather insensitive to alternatives involving more than one non-zero root. Other proposed test statistics are shown to be less sensitive as judged by the ESL criterion.
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