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Multivariate ANalysis Of VAriance (MANOVA) is a generalization of ANOVA for the case with several dependent variables.
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How to interpret the overall statistically significant effect of a MANOVA (In words)?
The problem you find concerning a statistically significant MANOVA output, but no statistically significant univariate ANOVA's, lies in the very nature of a MANOVA. … For an excellent paper on this difference, check Huberty and Morris' article on the difference between an ANOVA and MANOVA. …
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Significant output in Levene's test for equality of variances in MANOVA; what to do?
But, in the MANOVA, there seems no such option.
My question is what options I do have. Should I instead perform several ANOVA's (and by doing so omitting the power of a MANOVA)? … Or should I eliminate the two variables from the MANOVA and run it with only four dependent variables? …
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Post-hoc tests for MANOVA: univariate ANOVAs or discriminant analysis?
I am using a MANOVA test to compare nine different dependent variables (from neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric assessment) between three groups. … Statistics" chapter 16, and he states that the preferred post-hoc analysis is a discriminant analysis, because of the linear combination in which the dependent variables are related to group membership in a MANOVA …