Page's trend test
In statistics, the Page test for multiple comparisons between ordered correlated variables is the counterpart of Spearman's rank correlation coefficient which summarizes the association of continuous variables. It is also known as Page's trend test or Page's L test. It is a repeated measure trend test.
The Page test is useful where:
- there are three or more conditions,
- a number of subjects are all observed in each of them, and
- we predict that the observations will have a particular order.
against the alternative hypothesis that
It has more statistical power than the Friedman test against the alternative that there is a difference in trend. Friedman's test considers the alternative hypothesis that the central tendencies of the observations under the n conditions are different without specifying their order.
Procedure for the Page test, with k subjects each exposed to n conditions:
- Arrange the n conditions in the order implied by the alternative hypothesis, and assign each of them a rank Yi.
- For each of the k subjects separately, rank the n observations from 1 to n.
- Add the ranks for each condition to give a total Xi.
- Multiply Xi by Yi and add all the products together; this sum is called L.
- To test whether there is a significant trend, values of L can be compared with those tabulated by Page.
- If a measure of the overall correlation between the conditions and the data is required, it can be calculated as
A corresponding extension of Kendall's tau was developed by Jonckheere.