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Kruskal Wallis Test

Kruskal Wallis Test: It is a nonparametric test. It is sometimes referred to as One-Way ANOVA on ranks. It is a nonparametric alternative to One-Way ANOVA. It is an extension of the Man-Whitney Test to situations where more than two levels/populations are involved. This test falls under the family of Rank Sum tests. It depends on the ranks of the sample observations.

Non-Parametric Test:  It is a test which does not follow normal distribution.



Elements of a Kruskal Wallis Test

Assumptions of Kruskal Wallis Test



Null Hypothesis of Kruskal Wallis Test

The Kruskal Wallis Test has one Null Hypothesis i.e. – The distributions are Equal.

H Statistics of Kruskal Wallis Test

ni = number of items in sample i
Ri = sum of ranks of all items in sample i
K = total number of samples
n = n1 + n2 + ...... +nK ; Total number of observations in all samples.

Steps to perform Kruskal Wallis Test

Let us take an example to understand how to perform this test.

Example:- The score of a sample of 20 students in their university examination are arranged according to the method used in their training : 1) Video Lectures 2) Books and Articles 3) Class Room Training. Evaluate the Effectiveness of these training methods at 0.10 level of significance.

Video Lecture Books and Articles Class Room Training
76 80 70
90 80 85
84 67 52
95 59 93
57 91 86
72 94 79
  68 80

Step 1: Identify Independent and Dependent variables

Here,
Independent variable – method of training. It has three levels.
Dependent variable – examination scores.

Step 2: State the Hypothesis

H0 = The mean examination scores of students trained by each of the three methods are equal. u1=u2=u3.

H1 = At least one of the mean examination scores is not equal.

Step 3: Sort the data for all groups in ascending order and allot them ranks. If more than one entry has the same score then take the average of the ranks and allot the same rank to each of those entries.

Rank  Score Training Method Rank  Score Training Method
1 52 CR 11 80 BA
2 57 VL 11 80 CR
3 59 BA 13 84 VL
4 67 BA 14 85 CR
5 68 BA 15 86 CR
6 70 CR 16 90 VL
7 72 VL 17 91 BA
8 76 VL 18 93 CR
9 79 CR 19 94 BA
11 80 BA 20 95 VL

In this the score 80 had three ranks 10, 11 and 12. So we took the average of these ranks which was 11.

Step 4: Arrange back according to the levels an calculate the sum of ranks for each level.

Video Lecture  Rank Books and Articles Rank Class Room Training Rank
57 2 59 3 52 1
72 7 67 4 70 6
76 8 68 5 79 9
84 13 80 11 80 11
90 16 80 11 85 14
95 20 91 17 86 15
    94 19 93 18
  ∑=66   ∑=70   ∑=74

Step 5: Calculate H Statistics

H = 0.0938

Step 6: Find the critical chi-square value

Degree of freedom = K-1 => 3-1=2 
Alpha = 0.10

Use this chi-square table to find the value.

X2 = 4.605

Step 7: Compare H value and Critical Chi- Square value

Here, 0.0938 < 4.605.

Since, Hcalc < X2 . We accept the Null Hypothesis. We can say that there is no difference in the result obtained by using the three training methods.

This is all about the Kruskal Wallis Test. For any queries do leave a comment down below.

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