posted and e-mailed.

 - This is really imprecise -
 - pardon my impatience today -
 - What inspired this question? -

On 15 Sep 2003 04:34:12 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mark
Meredith) wrote:

> I am currently attempting to analyse some data of the following form:
> approximately ten different variables were sampled in ten different
> years. 

Could it be that these were sequential years?
Could it be that  the same 10  'things'  were measured each year?
Or, if not the same, they have some logical relationship?

>        I would like to analyse within individual groupings for each

... "groupings" ?     You mean, are some of the 10 scores similar?

> year and across the years as well, and make some comment on the noise
> in the data too. I've downloaded a freeware stats analysis program
> called Vista, and played around with the data a bit, but can't seem to
> hit upon the best way to get some interesting results.


If you aren't willing to give us any bigger hint about your data, 
then I recommend that you read extensively, to get a better
notion of how to describe your case abstractly.
You might look at Judd and McClelland's  "Data Analysis,
A model-comparison  approach."

There are several other textbook recommendations 
posted in the last day or so, on one of  the  sci.stat.*  
groups.


-- 
Rich Ulrich, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pitt.edu/~wpilib/index.html
"Taxes are the price we pay for civilization." 
.
.
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