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Definition of Friedman test
1. Noun. Pregnancy test that involves injecting some of the woman's urine into an unmated female rabbit and later examining the ovaries of the rabbit; presence of corpora lutea indicates that the woman is pregnant.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Friedman Test
Literary usage of Friedman test
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mathematical Statistics and Applications: Festschrift for Constance Van Eeden by Constance van Eeden, Marc Moore, Sorana Froda, Christian Léger (2003)
"The friedman test is the most well-known example of this approach, Hollander and
... On the other hand, as opposed to the friedman test, its efficiency ..."
2. Overview of the Third Text Retrieval Conference (Trec-3) edited by D. K. Harmon (1995)
"friedman test, which makes no assumptions beyond a level of measurement at least
ordinal. The reason for this preference is that nonparametric tests, ..."
3. Assessing the Effects of Fire Disturbance on Ecosystems: A Scientific Agenda by Daniel L. Schmoldt (2000)
"Overall agreement in rankings was supported by the friedman test, ... There was
good agreement (friedman test) by workgroup members on response rankings for ..."
4. Text Retrieval Conference, 4th edited by D. K. Harman (1998)
"The final column gives the rank difference that is statistically significant with
a p-value of 0.05 according to the friedman test [13]. ..."
5. Air Quality Criteria for Oxides of Nitrogenby Dennis J. Kotchmar by Dennis J. Kotchmar (1996)
"The friedman test showed no difference across treatment groups (ie, there was no
statistically significant increase in histamine responsiveness as a result ..."
6. Sas/stat 9.1 User's Guide by SAS Institute, Virginia Clark (2004)
"Ipe, D. (1987), “Performing the friedman test and the Associated Multiple Comparison
Test Using PROC GLM,” Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual SAS Users Group ..."