Hi, I posted this question under .consult before, but no one's responded. I thought I might find a different group of statisticians under .edu for this type of question...
I'm looking at a Binomial example from the wonderful book by Box, Hunter & Hunter. On p.135 of the mothproofing agents example it is mentioned that the variance of the transformed score is 1013/n. Why is this? I got reasonably close after finding the derivative of the arcsine (I think that's the kind of thing that's required), but I just can't understand the 1013! Regards, Frank . . ================================================================= Instructions for joining and leaving this list, remarks about the problem of INAPPROPRIATE MESSAGES, and archives are available at: . http://jse.stat.ncsu.edu/ . =================================================================
