One source of disappointment for me in the ANOVA course I just took was the
absence of the random block factorial situation in which multiple
observations are taken on subjects or blocks for each combination of
treatments. Our textbook, Kirk's 3rd Edition - the psychologist's Bible -
is silent on the matter - yet the design is common in experimental
psychology. My Master's project used such a design, and I didn't fully
understand what I was doing - I simply applied the software package that
both collected the data and computed the ANOVAs, and felt terribly guilty
about it. Now I've taken the course and still am not sure where all the
degrees of freedom come from, etc. Can anyone direct me to a good treatment
of this model?
Also - is what Kirk calls the RBF-pq design with repeated measures the same
thing as what others refer to as a repeated measures ANOVA?
TIA,
David Klein
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