Hello R community,

I would like to test for learning effects by subjects in my experiment. Each subject 
participates in six consecutive auction rounds of the same treatment.
The response variable is the efficiency of an auction outcome measured by a real 
number. Since the efficiency increases over the six rounds, I suppose that subjects 
learn about the rules of the auction institution, but I would like to test for that 
conjecture. 

The prop.trend.test does not seem to be right, because the treatment does not change 
between the rounds, i.e. the number of trials (n) is not available. A linear 
regression shows a positive slope and the 99%-confidence interval shows a significant 
deviation from a zero slope, but I am not able to compute the exact p-value. The 
Cox-Stuart test for trend detects a trend but gives a p-value of 1.

Isn't there a distribution-free, exact test for trend which operates on the rank-oder 
of the data instead of binary coded values?

Please apologize for asking a rather R-unspecific question.

Thanks in advance
Stefan
---
Stefan Strecker
Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH)
Department of Economics and Business Engineering
Chair for Information Management and Systems
Englerstrasse 14
D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
T: +49 721 608 8374
F: +49 721 608 8399
M: +49 179 69 29 746
http://www.iw.uni-karlsruhe.de
DH PGP Key available upon request

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