On Monday, April 22, 2013 9:11:28 AM UTC+12, Ray Koopman wrote:
> On Apr 21, 12:21 pm,
frank.degee...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> >
>
> > could it be that any repeated measures x-way ANOVA is equivalent to a (x+1)-way ANOVA for nonrelated samples
> The 2^x - 1 SS's and df's involving only the x between-subjects
> factors will be the same in both analyses, but the SS and df for the
> Subjects main effect and the 2^x - 1 interactions with Subjects in the
> repeated-measures analysis will all be pooled into the within-cell SS
> and df in the independent-groups analysis.
As I interpret the OP's question, the (x+1) way ANOVA includes a
subjects factor and its interactions with the other factors,
so these will be separated in the analysis--not
pooled into the within-cell SS and df.
On that interpretation, the answer to the OP's question is that
the two analyses will give the same SS & df breakdowns, but:
(a) the "independent groups ANOVA" can't really be carried
through to the end. Specifically, F's can't be computed,
because is no estimate of the within-cell error term
(i.e., no df's are left over for this error term, because
the subjects factor and its interactions will have used
them all).
(b) even if you had an estimate of within-cell error, the "independent
groups ANOVA" would be inappropriate because it would use this
same error term in the denominator of all F's rather than using
the appropriate treatment X S interaction error term that would be
used by the appropriate repeated-measures analysis.