By Roger J. Weldon
Communications of the ACM,
August 1964,
Vol. 7 No. 8, Pages 490-494
10.1145/355586.364822
Comments
A major problem in using the analysis of variance, as the number of factors increases, is the exponential rise in the number of interactions. Even though the experimenter may not be interested in these interactions it is impossible to ignore them in most experimental designs because of the problem of getting error terms.
It is natural therefore to look to the computer to handle the bulk of work involved in computing the interactions. A program device to get the computer to do this is described.
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