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Mann Whitney U Test

The Mann-Whitney U-Test is a nonparametric test used to evaluate differences between two independent groups when the dependent variable is either ordinal or continuous, but not normally distributed. It compares the ranks of the scores in both groups rather than the mean scores. The procedure involves ranking all scores combined from both groups from lowest to highest and comparing the sums of the ranks from each group to determine if one group tends to have systematically higher or lower ranks using a table of critical U values. If the calculated U value is less than the critical value, then there is a significant difference between the groups.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
371 views13 pages

Mann Whitney U Test

The Mann-Whitney U-Test is a nonparametric test used to evaluate differences between two independent groups when the dependent variable is either ordinal or continuous, but not normally distributed. It compares the ranks of the scores in both groups rather than the mean scores. The procedure involves ranking all scores combined from both groups from lowest to highest and comparing the sums of the ranks from each group to determine if one group tends to have systematically higher or lower ranks using a table of critical U values. If the calculated U value is less than the critical value, then there is a significant difference between the groups.

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dduallo
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Mann-Whitney U-Test

An alternative to the Independent Measures t-test

The Mann-Whitney test is designed to use the data from two separate samples to evaluate the difference between two treatments. Individual scores in the two samples should be rank-ordered. The Mann-Whitney test compares two distributions rather than two means.

If the 2 samples are combined and all the scores placed in rank order, the scores from one sample should be concentrated at one end of the line and the scores from the other sample should be concentrated at the other end.

If there is no treatment difference, large and small scores will be mixed evenly in the 2 samples because there is no reason for one set of scores to be systematically larger or smaller than the other.

Example
nA = 6 nB = 6
Sample A Sample B 27 71 2 63 9 18 48 68 6 94 15 8

STEP 1. State your hypothesis.


Ho: There is no difference between the two treatments. Therefore, there is no tendency for the ranks in one treatment condition to be systematically higher (or lower) than the ranks in the other treatment condition. H1: There is a difference between the two treatments. Therefore, the ranks in one treatment condition are systematically higher (or lower) than the ranks in the other treatment condition.

STEP 2. Select alpha level & look up critical U value.


a. Select alpha level and type of test. = .05,

b. Look at Mann-Whitney U table. For nA = 6, nB = 6, the critical U value is 5.

STEP 3. Compute RA and RB


a. Compute RA (sum of the ranks of scores in sample A). RA = 1 + 2 + 4 + 5 + 7 + 8 = 27 b. Compute RB (sum of the ranks of scores in sample B). RB = 3 + 6 + 9 + 10 + 11 + 12 = 51

STEP 4. Compute UA and UB


a. UA = nAnB + nA (nA + 1) - RA 2 = 6(6) + 6(7) 27 2 = 36 + 21 27 UA = 30

b. UB = nAnB + nB (nB + 1) - RB 2 = 6(6) + 6(7) 51 2 = 36 + 21 51 UB = 6

The Mann-Whitney U value is the smaller of these two, U = 6.

RANK 1

SCORE 2

SAMPLE (A)

POINTS FOR SAMPLE A 6 points

2
3 4 5

6
8 9 15

(A)
(B) (A) (A)

6 points
5 points 5 points 4 points 4 points

Each score in sample A is assigned 1 point for every score in sample B that has a higher rank. UA = 6 + 6 + 5 + 5 + 4 + 4 = 30 UB = 6 UA + UB = nAnB 30 + 6 = 6(6) U = 36

6
7 8 9 10 11 12

18
27 48 63 68 71 94

(B)
(A) (A) (B) (B) (B) (B)

STEP 5. State your conclusion


U = 6, p > .05 Thus, we retain Ho. The data do not provide enough evidence to conclude that there is a significant difference between the two treatments.

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