CIR process

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In statistics, Levene's test[1] is an inferential statistic used to assess the equality of variances for a variable calculated for two or more groups. Some common statistical procedures assume that variances of the populations from which different samples are drawn are equal. Levene's test assesses this assumption. It tests the null hypothesis that the population variances are equal (called homogeneity of variance or homoscedasticity). If the resulting P-value of Levene's test is less than some critical value (typically 0.05), the obtained differences in sample variances are unlikely to have occurred based on random sampling from a population with equal variances. Thus, the null hypothesis of equal variances is rejected and it is concluded that there is a difference between the variances in the population.

Some of the procedures typically assuming homoscedasticity, for which one can use Levene's tests, include analysis of variance and t-tests.

Levene's test is often used before a comparison of means. When Levene's test shows significance, one should switch to generalized tests, free from homoscedasticity assumptions.

Levene's test may also be used as a main test, for answering a stand-alone question whether two sub-samples in a given population have equal or different variances.


Definition

The test statistic, W, is defined as follows:

where

(Both definitions are in use though the second one is, strictly speaking, the Brown–Forsythe test – see below for comparison)

The significance of is tested against where is a quantile of the F-test distribution, with and its degrees of freedom, and is the chosen level of significance (usually 0.05 or 0.01).

Comparison with the Brown–Forsythe test

The Brown–Forsythe test uses the median instead of the mean. Although the optimal choice depends on the underlying distribution, the definition based on the median is recommended as the choice that provides good robustness against many types of non-normal data while retaining good statistical power. If one has knowledge of the underlying distribution of the data, this may indicate using one of the other choices. Brown and Forsythe performed Monte Carlo studies that indicated that using the trimmed mean performed best when the underlying data followed a Cauchy distribution (a heavy-tailed distribution) and the median performed best when the underlying data followed a Chi-squared distribution with four degrees of freedom (a heavily skewed distribution). Using the mean provided the best power for symmetric, moderate-tailed, distributions.

See also

References

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