Repeated measurements, as the name suggests, are observations of the same characteristic, which are made several times. What distinguishes such observations from those in more traditional statistical data modeling is that the same variable is measured on the same observational unit more than once. The responses are not independent as in the usual regression analysis and more than one observational unit is involved. The responses do not form a simple time series. To many animal scientists, a mention of the term, repeated measurements evokes the idea either of the fisheries study of growth curves or split plot designs. However, once one begins to delve into the subject, one realizes that these two subjects, in no way, completely cover the field of repeated observations. In fact, repeated measurements are very frequent not only in animal science experiments but also in almost all scientific fields where statistical models are used [1].
Primary Language | English |
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Journal Section | Research Article |
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Publication Date | January 1, 2006 |
Published in Issue | Year 2006 Volume: 1 Issue: 7 |