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Steiger (1980) pointed out that the sum of the squared elements of a correlation matrix, or the Fisher z score equivalents, is distributed as chi square under the null hypothesis that the values are zero (i.e., elements of the identity matrix). This is particularly useful for examining whether correlations in a single matrix differ from zero or for comparing two matrices. Jennrich (1970) also examined tests of differences between matrices.
cortest.normal(R1, R2 = NULL, n1 = NULL, n2 = NULL, fisher = TRUE) #the steiger test
cortest(R1,R2=NULL,n1=NULL,n2 = NULL, fisher = TRUE,cor=TRUE) #same as cortest.normal
cortest.jennrich(R1,R2,n1=NULL, n2=NULL) #the Jennrich test
cortest.mat(R1,R2=NULL,n1=NULL,n2 = NULL) #an alternative test
A correlation matrix. (If R1 is not rectangular, and cor=TRUE, the correlations are found).
A correlation matrix. If R2 is not rectangular, and cor=TRUE, the correlations are found. If R2 is NULL, then the test is just whether R1 is an identity matrix.
Sample size of R1
Sample size of R2
Fisher z transform the correlations?
By default, if the input matrices are not symmetric, they are converted to correlation matrices. That is, they are treated as if they were the raw data. If cor=FALSE, then the input matrices are taken to be correlation matrices.
The chi square statistic
Degrees of freedom for the Chi Square
The probability of observing the Chi Square under the null hypothesis.
There are several ways to test if a matrix is the identity matrix. The most well known is the chi square test of Bartlett (1951) and Box (1949). A very straightforward test, discussed by Steiger (1980) is to find the sum of the squared correlations or the sum of the squared Fisher transformed correlations. Under the null hypothesis that all the correlations are equal, this sum is distributed as chi square. This is implemented in
cortest
and cortest.normal
Yet another test, is the Jennrich(1970) test of the equality of two matrices. This compares the differences between two matrices to the averages of two matrices using a chi square test. This is implemented in cortest.jennrich
.
Yet another option cortest.mat
is to compare the two matrices using an approach analogous to that used in evaluating the adequacy of a factor model. In factor analysis, the maximum likelihood fit statistic is
This in turn is converted to a chi square
fa
.)
That is, the model (M = FF' + U2) is compared to the original correlation matrix (R) by a function of cortest.mat
finds the chi squares associated with
Steiger, James H. (1980) Testing pattern hypotheses on correlation matrices: alternative statistics and some empirical results. Multivariate Behavioral Research, 15, 335-352.
Jennrich, Robert I. (1970) An Asymptotic
# NOT RUN {
x <- matrix(rnorm(1000),ncol=10)
cortest.normal(x) #just test if this matrix is an identity
x <- sim.congeneric(loads =c(.9,.8,.7,.6,.5),N=1000,short=FALSE)
y <- sim.congeneric(loads =c(.9,.8,.7,.6,.5),N=1000,short=FALSE)
cortest.normal(x$r,y$r,n1=1000,n2=1000) #The Steiger test
cortest.jennrich(x$r,y$r,n1=100,n2=1000) # The Jennrich test
cortest.mat(x$r,y$r,n1=1000,n2=1000) #twice the degrees of freedom as the Jennrich
# }
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