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Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference
11g Release 1 (11.1)

Part Number B28286-01
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STATS_T_TEST_*

The t-test functions are:

Syntax

stats_t_test::=

Description of stats_t_test.gif follows
Description of the illustration stats_t_test.gif

Purpose

The t-test measures the significance of a difference of means. You can use it to compare the means of two groups or the means of one group with a constant. The one-sample and two-sample STATS_T_TEST_* functions take three arguments: two expressions and a return value of type VARCHAR2. The functions return one number, determined by the value of the third argument. If you omit the third argument, then the default is TWO_SIDED_SIG. The meaning of the return values is shown in Table 5-9.

Table 5-9 STATS_T_TEST_* Return Values

Return Value Meaning

STATISTIC

The observed value of t

DF

Degree of freedom

ONE_SIDED_SIG

One-tailed significance of t

TWO_SIDED_SIG

Two-tailed significance of t


The two independent STATS_T_TEST_* functions can take a fourth argument (expr3) if the third argument is specified as STATISTIC or ONE_SIDED_SIG. In this case, expr3 indicates which value of expr1 is the high value, or the value whose rejection region is the upper tail.

The significance of the observed value of t is the probability that the value of t would have been obtained by chance--a number between 0 and 1. The smaller the value, the more significant the difference between the means. One-sided significance is always respect to the upper tail. For one-sample and paired t-test, the high value is the first expression. For independent t-test, the high value is the one specified by expr3.

The degree of freedom depends on the type of t-test that resulted in the observed value of t. For example, for a one-sample t-test (STATS_T_TEST_ONE), the degree of freedom is the number of observations in the sample minus 1.


STATS_T_TEST_ONE

In the STATS_T_TEST_ONE function, expr1 is the sample and expr2 is the constant mean against which the sample mean is compared. For this t-test only, expr2 is optional; the constant mean defaults to 0. This function obtains the value of t by dividing the difference between the sample mean and the known mean by the standard error of the mean (rather than the standard error of the difference of the means, as for STATS_T_TEST_PAIRED).

STATS_T_TEST_ONE Example The following example determines the significance of the difference between the average list price and the constant value 60:

SELECT AVG(prod_list_price) group_mean,
       STATS_T_TEST_ONE(prod_list_price, 60, 'STATISTIC') t_observed,
       STATS_T_TEST_ONE(prod_list_price, 60) two_sided_p_value
  FROM sh.products;

GROUP_MEAN T_OBSERVED TWO_SIDED_P_VALUE
---------- ---------- -----------------
139.545556 2.32107746        .023158537

STATS_T_TEST_PAIRED

In the STATS_T_TEST_PAIRED function, expr1 and expr2 are the two samples whose means are being compared. This function obtains the value of t by dividing the difference between the sample means by the standard error of the difference of the means (rather than the standard error of the mean, as for STATS_T_TEST_ONE).


STATS_T_TEST_INDEP and STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU

In the STATS_T_TEST_INDEP and STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU functions, expr1 is the grouping column and expr2 is the sample of values. The pooled variances version (STATS_T_TEST_INDEP) tests whether the means are the same or different for two distributions that have similar variances. The unpooled variances version (STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU) tests whether the means are the same or different even if the two distributions are known to have significantly different variances.

Before using these functions, it is advisable to determine whether the variances of the samples are significantly different. If they are, then the data may come from distributions with different shapes, and the difference of the means may not be very useful. You can perform an f-test to determine the difference of the variances. If they are not significantly different, use STATS_T_TEST_INDEP. If they are significantly different, use STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU. Refer to STATS_F_TEST for information on performing an f-test.

STATS_T_TEST_INDEP Example The following example determines the significance of the difference between the average sales to men and women where the distributions are assumed to have similar (pooled) variances:

SELECT SUBSTR(cust_income_level, 1, 22) income_level,
      AVG(DECODE(cust_gender, 'M', amount_sold, null)) sold_to_men,
      AVG(DECODE(cust_gender, 'F', amount_sold, null)) sold_to_women,
      STATS_T_TEST_INDEP(cust_gender, amount_sold, 'STATISTIC', 'F') t_observed,
      STATS_T_TEST_INDEP(cust_gender, amount_sold) two_sided_p_value
  FROM sh.customers c, sh.sales s
  WHERE c.cust_id = s.cust_id
  GROUP BY ROLLUP(cust_income_level)
  ORDER BY income_level, sold_to_men, sold_to_women, t_observed;

INCOME_LEVEL           SOLD_TO_MEN SOLD_TO_WOMEN T_OBSERVED TWO_SIDED_P_VALUE
---------------------- ----------- ------------- ---------- -----------------
A: Below 30,000          105.28349    99.4281447 -1.9880629        .046811482
B: 30,000 - 49,999       102.59651    109.829642 3.04330875        .002341053
C: 50,000 - 69,999      105.627588    110.127931 2.36148671        .018204221
D: 70,000 - 89,999      106.630299     110.47287 2.28496443        .022316997
E: 90,000 - 109,999     103.396741    101.610416 -1.2544577        .209677823
F: 110,000 - 129,999     106.76476    105.981312 -.60444998        .545545304
G: 130,000 - 149,999    108.877532     107.31377 -.85298245        .393671218
H: 150,000 - 169,999    110.987258    107.152191 -1.9062363        .056622983
I: 170,000 - 189,999    102.808238     107.43556 2.18477851        .028908566
J: 190,000 - 249,999    108.040564    115.343356 2.58313425        .009794516
K: 250,000 - 299,999    112.377993    108.196097 -1.4107871        .158316973
L: 300,000 and above    120.970235    112.216342 -2.0642868        .039003862
                        107.121845     113.80441 .686144393        .492670059
                        106.663769    107.276386 1.08013499        .280082357
14 rows selected.

STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU Example The following example determines the significance of the difference between the average sales to men and women where the distributions are known to have significantly different (unpooled) variances:

SELECT SUBSTR(cust_income_level, 1, 22) income_level,
       AVG(DECODE(cust_gender, 'M', amount_sold, null)) sold_to_men,
       AVG(DECODE(cust_gender, 'F', amount_sold, null)) sold_to_women,
       STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU(cust_gender, amount_sold, 'STATISTIC', 'F') t_observed,
       STATS_T_TEST_INDEPU(cust_gender, amount_sold) two_sided_p_value
  FROM sh.customers c, sh.sales s
  WHERE c.cust_id = s.cust_id
  GROUP BY ROLLUP(cust_income_level)
  ORDER BY income_level, sold_to_men, sold_to_women, t_observed;

INCOME_LEVEL           SOLD_TO_MEN SOLD_TO_WOMEN T_OBSERVED TWO_SIDED_P_VALUE
---------------------- ----------- ------------- ---------- -----------------
A: Below 30,000          105.28349    99.4281447 -2.0542592        .039964704
B: 30,000 - 49,999       102.59651    109.829642 2.96922332        .002987742
C: 50,000 - 69,999      105.627588    110.127931  2.3496854        .018792277
D: 70,000 - 89,999      106.630299     110.47287 2.26839281        .023307831
E: 90,000 - 109,999     103.396741    101.610416 -1.2603509        .207545662
F: 110,000 - 129,999     106.76476    105.981312 -.60580011        .544648553
G: 130,000 - 149,999    108.877532     107.31377 -.85219781        .394107755
H: 150,000 - 169,999    110.987258    107.152191 -1.9451486        .051762624
I: 170,000 - 189,999    102.808238     107.43556 2.14966921        .031587875
J: 190,000 - 249,999    108.040564    115.343356 2.54749867        .010854966
K: 250,000 - 299,999    112.377993    108.196097 -1.4115514        .158091676
L: 300,000 and above    120.970235    112.216342 -2.0726194        .038225611
                        107.121845     113.80441 .689462437        .490595765
                        106.663769    107.276386 1.07853782        .280794207
14 rows selected.