Durbin test


In the analysis of designed experiments, the Friedman test is the most common non-parametric test for complete block designs. The Durbin test is a nonparametric test for balanced incomplete designs that reduces to the Friedman test in the case of a complete block design.

Background

In a randomized block design, k treatments are applied to b blocks. In a complete block design, every treatment is run for every block and the data are arranged as follows:
Treatment 1Treatment 2Treatment k
Block 1X11X12X1k
Block 2X21X22X2k
Block 3X31X32X3k
Block bXb1Xb2Xbk

For some experiments, it may not be realistic to run all treatments in all blocks, so one may need to run an incomplete block design. In this case, it is strongly recommended to run a balanced incomplete design. A balanced incomplete block design has the following properties:
  1. Every block contains k experimental units.
  2. Every treatment appears in r blocks.
  3. Every treatment appears with every other treatment an equal number of times.

    Test assumptions

The Durbin test is based on the following assumptions:
  1. The b blocks are mutually independent. That means the results within one block do not affect the results within other blocks.
  2. The data can be meaningfully ranked.

    Test definition

Let R be the rank assigned to Xij within block i. Average ranks are used in the case of ties. The ranks are summed to obtain
The Durbin test is then
The test statistic is
where
where t is the number of treatments, k is the number of treatments per block, b is the number of blocks, and r is the number of times each treatment appears.
For significance level α, the critical region is given by
where Fα, k − 1, bkbt + 1 denotes the α-quantile of the F distribution with k − 1 numerator degrees of freedom and bkbt + 1 denominator degrees of freedom. The null hypothesis is rejected if the test statistic is in the critical region. If the hypothesis of identical treatment effects is rejected, it is often desirable to determine which treatments are different. Treatments i and j are considered different if
where Rj and Ri are the column sum of ranks within the blocks, t1 − α/2, bkbt + 1 denotes the 1 − α/2 quantile of the t-distribution with bkbt + 1 degrees of freedom.

Historical note

T1 was the original statistic proposed by James Durbin, which would have an approximate null distribution of . The T2 statistic has slightly more accurate critical regions, so it is now the preferred statistic. The T2 statistic is the two-way analysis of variance statistic computed on the ranks R.

Related tests

is applied for the special case of a binary response variable. Cochran's Q test is valid for complete block designs only.