Neha Patil (Editor)

Closed testing procedure

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

In statistics, the closed testing procedure is a general method for performing more than one hypothesis test simultaneously.

Contents

The closed testing principle

Suppose there are k hypotheses H1,..., Hk to be tested and the overall type I error rate is α. The closed testing principle allows the rejection of any one of these elementary hypotheses, say Hi, if all possible intersection hypotheses involving Hi can be rejected by using valid local level α tests. It controls the familywise error rate for all the k hypotheses at level α in the strong sense.

Example

Suppose there are three hypotheses H1,H2, and H3 to be tested and the overall type I error rate is 0.05. Then H1 can be rejected at level α if H1H2H3, H1H2, H1H3 and H1 can all be rejected using valid tests with level 0.05.

Special cases

The Holm–Bonferroni method is a special case of a closed test procedure for which each intersection null hypothesis is tested using the simple Bonferroni test. As such, it controls the familywise error rate for all the k hypotheses at level α in the strong sense.

Multiple test procedures developed using the graphical approach for constructing and illustrating multiple test procedures are a subclass of closed testing procedures.

References

Closed testing procedure Wikipedia


Similar Topics