Learn R Programming

DescTools (version 0.99.56)

power.chisq.test: Power Calculations for ChiSquared Tests

Description

Compute power of test or determine parameters to obtain target power (same as power.anova.test).

Usage

power.chisq.test(n = NULL, w = NULL, df = NULL, sig.level = 0.05, power = NULL)

Value

Object of class "power.htest", a list of the arguments (including the computed one) augmented with 'method' and 'note' elements.

Arguments

n

total number of observations.

w

effect size.

df

degree of freedom (depends on the chosen test.

sig.level

Significance level (Type I error probability).

power

Power of test (1 minus Type II error probability).

Author

Stephane Champely <champely@univ-lyon1.fr>
but this is a mere copy of Peter Dalgaard's work on power.t.test

Details

Exactly one of the parameters w, n, power or sig.level must be passed as NULL, and this parameter is determined from the others. Note that the last one has non-NULL default, so NULL must be explicitly passed, if you want to compute it.

References

Cohen, J. (1988) Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences (2nd ed.) Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

See Also

Examples

Run this code
## Exercise 7.1 P. 249 from Cohen (1988) 
power.chisq.test(w=0.289, df=(4-1), n=100, sig.level=0.05)

## Exercise 7.3 p. 251
power.chisq.test(w=0.346, df=(2-1)*(3-1), n=140, sig.level=0.01)

## Exercise 7.8 p. 270
power.chisq.test(w=0.1, df=(5-1)*(6-1), power=0.80, sig.level=0.05)

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab