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mice (version 2.25)

potthoffroy: Potthoff-Roy data

Description

Data from Potthoff-Roy (1964) with repeated measures on dental fissures.

Arguments

Format

tbs is a data frame with 27 rows and 6 columns:
id
Person number
sex
Sex M/F
d8
Distance at age 8 years
d10
Distance at age 10 years
d12
Distance at age 12 years
d14
Distance at age 14 years

Source

Potthoff, R. F., Roy, S. N. (1964). A generalized multivariate analysis of variance model usefully especially for growth curve problems. Biometrika, 51(3), 313-326. Little, R. J. A., Rubin, D. B. (1987). Statistical Analysis with Missing Data. New York: John Wiley & Sons. Van Buuren, S. (2012). Flexible Imputation of Missing Data. Boca Raton, FL: Chapman \& Hall/CRC Press.

Details

This data set is the famous Potthoff-Roy data, used to demonstrate MANOVA on repeated measure data. Potthoff and Roy (1964) published classic data on a study in 16 boys and 11 girls, who at ages 8, 10, 12, and 14 had the distance (mm) from the center of the pituitary gland to the pteryomaxillary fissure measured. Changes in pituitary-pteryomaxillary distances during growth is important in orthodontic therapy. The goals of the study were to describe the distance in boys and girls as simple functions of age, and then to compare the functions for boys and girls. The data have been reanalyzed by many authors including Jennrich and Schluchter (1986), Little and Rubin (1987), Pinheiro and Bates (2000), Verbeke and Molenberghs (2000) and Molenberghs and Kenward (2007). See Chapter 9 of Van Buuren (2012) for a challengeing exercise using these data.

Examples

Run this code
### create missing values at age 10 as in Little and Rubin (1987)

phr <- potthoffroy
idmis <- c(3,6,9,10,13,16,23,24,27)
phr[idmis, 4] <- NA
phr

md.pattern(phr)

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