> It appears you have paired data.

If the exemple deals with a trial where the 2 "scorers" have independant
"strategies" to win.(ex : trial 1 : Player A1 vs Player B1 in a free throw
contest ,(basket ball), then trial 2 : Player A2 vs Player B2,...)
and the results consists in % success...
Are the data paired?
Thanks.

As for me, an example of paired data could be that:
Compare the performance of n athletes with two different type of shoes.
Sample 1 :the results with the first pair of shoes
Sample 2 :the results with the second pair of shoes

Here the athlete would be the "factor" which implies "paires data".

Is this judicious?


.
.
=================================================================
Instructions for joining and leaving this list, remarks about the
problem of INAPPROPRIATE MESSAGES, and archives are available at:
.                  http://jse.stat.ncsu.edu/                    .
=================================================================

Reply via email to