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McNemar's test

McNemar's test is basically a paired version of Chi-square test. Let's say you asked whether the participants liked the device before and after the experiment. After experiment Yes Before experiment Yes 6 No 8 2 4 No

Here, what you want to test is whether the number of the participants who liked the device were significantly changed between before and after the experiment.

Effect size
The effect size of an Fisher's exact test can be calculated in the same way as a Chi-square test.

Effect size
The effect size of a Chi-square test can be described by phi or Cramer's V. If your data table is 2 x 2, you will calculate phi (k=2 in the equation below) and otherwise, Cramer's V (k>2 in the equation below) . But the calculation is pretty much the same and it is as follows:

, where N is the total number of the samples, and k is the number of the rows or columns, whichever smaller, in your data table. And the chi-squared here is the value without any correction. Here are values which are considered small, medium and large sizes. small size medium size large size Cramer's phi or V 0.10 0.30 0.50

Alamat (http://yatani.jp/HCIstats/ChiSquare#McNemarEffectSize )

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