"Type III" is a peculiarity of SAS, which has taken root in the world. There are 3 main questions wrt to it:

1. How to compute it (outside of SAS). There is a trick using contr.treatment coding that works if the design has no missing factor combinations, your post has a link to such a description. The SAS documentation is very obtuse, thus almost no one knows how to compute the general case.

2. What is it? It is a population average. The predicted average treatment effect in a balanced population-- one where all the factor combinations appeared the same number of times. One way to compute 'type 3' is to create such a data set, get all the predicted values, and then take the average prediction for treatment A, average for treatment B, average for C, ... and test "are these averages the same". The algorithm of #1 above leads to another explanation which is a false trail, in my opinion.

3. Should you ever use it? No. There is a very strong inverse correlation between "understand what it really is" and "recommend its use". Stephen Senn has written very intellgently on the issues.

Terry Therneau


On 07/22/2015 05:00 AM, r-help-requ...@r-project.org wrote:
Dear Michael,
thanks a lot. I am studying the marginality and I came across to this post:

http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/r/faq/type3.htm

Do you think that the procedure there described is the right one to solve my 
problem?

Would you have any other online resources to suggest especially dealing with R?

My department does not have a statician, so I have to find a solution with my 
own capacities.

Thanks in advance

Angelo

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