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Date: Tuesday, 20 January 1987 14:31:10 EST
From: Alexander.Hauptmann@ph1.speech.cs.cmu.edu
To: bovik@a.cs.cmu.edu
Subject: statistics programs
Message-ID: <1987.1.20.19.24.57.Alexander.Hauptmann@ph1.speech.cs.cmu.edu>

In reply to my request for fancy statistics programs (for ANOVA),
here are the replies:

Minitab is available on cmuc, but not powerful enough.


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Date: 12 Dec 1986 08:08-EST 
From: Jonathan.Gifford@g.cs.cmu.edu
To: Alexander.Hauptmann@speech2.cs.cmu.edu
Subject: Re: Anova programs?
Message-Id: <534776938/jlg@g.cs.cmu.edu>
In-Reply-To: Alexander.Hauptmann's bboard message of 11-Dec-86 18:30

Responses to my post:

Minitab, available on cmuc, tops and the ibm-pc is not powerful enough.

"SAS is available on several of the VMS vaxes on campus, although I
don't know about CS machines, on the statistics department's vax (they
might let you use it on a one-time basis), the SUPA vax, Vax B.  It's
also available on the IBM 3083 in the computation center (node VMA).

I think SAS could do whatever you want statistically."

"I find BMD to produce the best output for a repeated measures ANOVA design.
It will handle a single dependent var with N trials per var and many
combinations of independent vars and covariates.  It's found on most of the
Comp Center machines.  If you want to test multiple dependent vars
simultaneously with a repeated design, SPSSX Manova will do the trick.
SAS, which I am not that familiar with, resides on the Comp Center research
Vaxes and the IBM 3083."


	Alex

