
* Systematic treatment of the commonly employed crossed and nested classification models used in analysis of variance designs
* Detailed and thorough discussion of certain random effects models not commonly found in texts at the introductory or intermediate level
* Numerical examples to analyze data from a wide variety of disciplines
* Many worked examples containing computer outputs from standard software packages such as SAS, SPSS, and BMDP for each numerical example
* Extensive exercise sets at the end of each chapter
* Numerous appendices with background reference concepts, terms, and results
* Balanced coverage of theory, methods, and practical applications
* Complete citations of important and related works at the end of each chapter, as well as an extensive general bibliography
Accessible to readers with only a modest mathematical and statistical background, the work will appeal to a broad audience of students, researchers, and practitioners in the mathematical, life, social, and engineering sciences. It may be used as a textbook in upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses, or as a reference for readers interested in the use of random effects models for data analysis.
| charles don keyes barbara schneider tahanee roberts verma rp s a drury | melvyn petterson thayer allyson gowdy michaelene mundy will osborne lundin stephen c paul harry |