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			121 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C++
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			121 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.6 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C++
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								// students_t_example3.cpp
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								// Copyright Paul A. Bristow 2006, 2007.
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								// Use, modification and distribution are subject to the
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								// Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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								// (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt
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								// or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
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								// Example 3 of using Student's t.
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								// A general guide to Student's t is at
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								// http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student's_t-test
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								// (and many other elementary and advanced statistics texts).
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								// It says:
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								// The t statistic was invented by William Sealy Gosset
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								// for cheaply monitoring the quality of beer brews.
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								// "Student" was his pen name.
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								// Gosset was statistician for Guinness brewery in Dublin, Ireland,
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								// hired due to Claude Guinness's innovative policy of recruiting the
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								// best graduates from Oxford and Cambridge for applying biochemistry
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								// and statistics to Guinness's industrial processes.
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								// Gosset published the t test in Biometrika in 1908,
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								// but was forced to use a pen name by his employer who regarded the fact
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								// that they were using statistics as a trade secret.
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								// In fact, Gosset's identity was unknown not only to fellow statisticians
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								// but to his employer - the company insisted on the pseudonym
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								// so that it could turn a blind eye to the breach of its rules.
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								// The Students't distribution function is described at
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								// http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student%27s_t_distribution
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								#include <boost/math/distributions/students_t.hpp>
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								   using boost::math::students_t;  // Probability of students_t(df, t).
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								#include <iostream>
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								   using std::cout;    using std::endl;
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								#include <iomanip>
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								   using std::setprecision;    using std::setw;
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								#include <cmath>
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								   using std::sqrt;
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								// This example of a two-sided test is from:
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								// B. M. Smith & M. B. Griffiths, Analyst, 1982, 107, 253,
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								// from Statistics for Analytical Chemistry, 3rd ed. (1994), pp 58-59
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								// J. C. Miller and J. N. Miller, Ellis Horwood ISBN 0 13 0309907
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								// Concentrations of lead (ug/l) determined by two different methods
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								// for each of four test portions,
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								// the concentration of each portion is significantly different,
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								// the values may NOT be pooled.
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								// (Called a 'paired test' by Miller and Miller
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								// because each portion analysed has a different concentration.)
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								// Portion  Wet oxidation Direct Extraction
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								//   1           71            76
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								//   2           61            68
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								//   3           50            48
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								//   4           60            57
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								const int portions = 4;
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								const int methods = 2;
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								float data [portions][methods] = {{71, 76}, {61,68}, {50, 48}, {60, 57}};
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								float diffs[portions];
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								int main()
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								{
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								   cout << "Example3 using Student's t function. " << endl;
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								   float mean_diff = 0.f;
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								   cout << "\n""Portion  wet_oxidation  Direct_extraction  difference" << endl;
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								   for (int portion = 0; portion < portions; portion++)
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								   { // Echo data and differences.
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								      diffs[portion] = data[portion][0] - data[portion][1];
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								      mean_diff += diffs[portion];
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								      cout << setw(4) << portion << ' ' << setw(14) << data[portion][0] << ' ' << setw(18)<< data[portion][1] << ' ' << setw(9) << diffs[portion] << endl;
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								   }
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								   mean_diff /= portions;
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								   cout << "Mean difference = " << mean_diff << endl; // -1.75
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								   float sd_diffs = 0.f;
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								   for (int portion = 0; portion < portions; portion++)
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								   { // Calculate standard deviation of differences.
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								      sd_diffs +=(diffs[portion] - mean_diff) * (diffs[portion] - mean_diff);
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								   }
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								   int degrees_of_freedom = portions-1; // Use the n-1 formula.
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								   sd_diffs /= degrees_of_freedom;
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								   sd_diffs = sqrt(sd_diffs);
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								   cout << "Standard deviation of differences = " << sd_diffs << endl; // 4.99166
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								   // Standard deviation of differences = 4.99166
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								   double t = mean_diff * sqrt(static_cast<double>(portions))/ sd_diffs; // -0.70117
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								   cout << "Student's t = " << t << ", if " << degrees_of_freedom << " degrees of freedom." << endl;
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								   // Student's t = -0.70117, if 3 degrees of freedom.
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								   cout << "Probability of the means being different is "
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								    << 2.F * cdf(students_t(degrees_of_freedom), t) << "."<< endl; // 0.266846 * 2 = 0.533692
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								   // Double the probability because using a 'two-sided test' because
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								   // mean for 'Wet oxidation' could be either
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								   // greater OR LESS THAN for 'Direct extraction'.
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								   return 0;
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								}  // int main()
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								/*
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								Output is:
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								Example3 using Student's t function. 
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								Portion  wet_oxidation  Direct_extraction  difference
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								   0             71                 76        -5
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								   1             61                 68        -7
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								   2             50                 48         2
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								   3             60                 57         3
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								Mean difference = -1.75
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								Standard deviation of differences = 4.99166
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								Student's t = -0.70117, if 3 degrees of freedom.
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								Probability of the means being different is 0.533692.
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								*/
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