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I would like to compute post hoc tests to follow up on results from the nparLD package.

In my sample dataset, I have two conditions, "drugA" and "drugB". There are 6 animals A-F and the weight of each animal has been measured 3 times under the influence of each drug.

id <- rep(c("A","B","C","D","E","F"),6)
drug <- c(rep(c("drugA"), 18), rep(c("drugB"), 18))
time <- rep(rep(1:3, each = 6),2)
value <- c(rnorm(6, 1, 0.4), rnorm(6, 3, 0.5), rnorm(6, 6, 0.8), rnorm(6, 1.1, 0.4), rnorm(6, 0.8, 0.2), rnorm(6, 1, 0.6))
df <- data.frame(id,drug, time, value)

df$id <- as.factor(df$id) 
df$drug <- as.factor(df$drug)
df$time <- as.factor(df$time)

library(nparLD)
stats <- nparLD(data = df, formula = value ~ drug*time, subject = "id")
stats$Wald.test
stats$ANOVA.test

What do you recommend for post hoc testing? Individual comparisons, where I compare subsets of the data using nparLD? Or is there a more elegant way of doing this?

Also, the results of the Wald and ANOVA-type tests differ, especially regarding the factor 'time'. What do you recommend?

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Edgar Brunner has recommended using the "nparcomp" R package to further probe results from nparLD. You can see more info in the paper: nparcomp: An R Software Package for Nonparametric Multiple Comparisons and Simultaneous Confidence Intervals, authors: Frank Konietschke, Marius Placzek, Frank Schaarschmidt, Ludwig A. Hothorn (2015), Journal of Statistical Software, doi:10.18637/jss.v064.i09.

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