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Noncentral F-distribution

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In probability theory and statistics, the noncentral F-distribution is a continuous probability distribution that is a noncentral generalization of the (ordinary) F-distribution. It describes the distribution of the quotient (X/n1)/(Y/n2), where the numerator X has a noncentral chi-squared distribution with n1 degrees of freedom and the denominator Y has a central chi-squared distribution with n2 degrees of freedom. It is also required that X and Y are statistically independent of each other.

It is the distribution of the test statistic in analysis of variance problems when the null hypothesis is false. The noncentral F-distribution is used to find the power function of such a test.

Occurrence and specification

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If is a noncentral chi-squared random variable with noncentrality parameter and degrees of freedom, and is a chi-squared random variable with degrees of freedom that is statistically independent of , then

is a noncentral F-distributed random variable. The probability density function (pdf) for the noncentral F-distribution is[1]

when and zero otherwise. The degrees of freedom and are positive. The term is the beta function, where

The cumulative distribution function for the noncentral F-distribution is

where is the regularized incomplete beta function.

The mean and variance of the noncentral F-distribution are

and

Special cases

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When λ = 0, the noncentral F-distribution becomes the F-distribution.

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Z has a noncentral chi-squared distribution if

where F has a noncentral F-distribution.

See also noncentral t-distribution.

Implementations

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The noncentral F-distribution is implemented in the R language (e.g., pf function), in MATLAB (ncfcdf, ncfinv, ncfpdf, ncfrnd and ncfstat functions in the statistics toolbox) in Mathematica (NoncentralFRatioDistribution function), in NumPy (random.noncentral_f), and in Boost C++ Libraries.[2]

A collaborative wiki page implements an interactive online calculator, programmed in the R language, for the noncentral t, chi-squared, and F distributions, at the Institute of Statistics and Econometrics of the Humboldt University of Berlin.[3]

Notes

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  1. ^ Kay, S. (1998). Fundamentals of Statistical Signal Processing: Detection Theory. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. p. 29. ISBN 0-13-504135-X.
  2. ^ John Maddock; Paul A. Bristow; Hubert Holin; Xiaogang Zhang; Bruno Lalande; Johan Råde. "Noncentral F Distribution: Boost 1.39.0". Boost.org. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  3. ^ Sigbert Klinke (10 December 2008). "Comparison of noncentral and central distributions". Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.

References

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