Family-wise error rate

In statistics, family-wise error rate (FWER) is the probability of making one or more false discoveries, or type I errors when performing multiple hypotheses tests.

History

Tukey coined the terms experimentwise error rate and "error rate per-experiment" to indicate error rates that the researcher could use as a control level in a multiple hypothesis experiment.

Background

Within the statistical framework, there are several definitions for the term "family":

  • Hochberg & Tamhane defined "family" in 1987 as "any collection of inferences for which it is meaningful to take into account some combined measure of error".[1]
  • According to Cox in 1982, a set of inferences should be regarded a family:
  1. To take into account the selection effect due to data dredging
  2. To ensure simultaneous correctness of a set of inferences as to guarantee a correct overall decision

To summarize, a family could best be defined by the potential selective inference that is being faced: A family is the smallest set of items of inference in an analysis, interchangeable about their meaning for the goal of research, from which selection of results for action, presentation or highlighting could be made (Yoav Benjamini).

Classification of multiple hypothesis tests

The following table defines the possible outcomes when testing multiple null hypotheses. Suppose we have a number m of null hypotheses, denoted by: H1, H2, ..., Hm. Using a statistical test, we reject the null hypothesis if the test is declared significant. We do not reject the null hypothesis if the test is non-significant. Summing each type of outcome over all Hi  yields the following random variables:

Null hypothesis is true (H0) Alternative hypothesis is true (HA) Total
Test is declared significant V S R
Test is declared non-significant U T
Total m

In m hypothesis tests of which are true null hypotheses, R is an observable random variable, and S, T, U, and V are unobservable random variables.

Definition

The FWER is the probability of making at least one type I error in the family,

or equivalently,

Thus, by assuring , the probability of making one or more type I errors in the family is controlled at level .

A procedure controls the FWER in the weak sense if the FWER control at level is guaranteed only when all null hypotheses are true (i.e. when , meaning the "global null hypothesis" is true).[2]

A procedure controls the FWER in the strong sense if the FWER control at level is guaranteed for any configuration of true and non-true null hypotheses (whether the global null hypothesis is true or not).[3]

Controlling procedures

Some classical solutions that ensure strong level FWER control, and some newer solutions exist.

The Bonferroni procedure

  • Denote by the p-value for testing
  • reject if

The Šidák procedure

  • Testing each hypothesis at level is Sidak's multiple testing procedure.
  • This procedure is more powerful than Bonferroni but the gain is small.
  • This procedure can fail to control the FWER when the tests are negatively dependent.

Tukey's procedure

  • Tukey's procedure is only applicable for pairwise comparisons.
  • It assumes independence of the observations being tested, as well as equal variation across observations (homoscedasticity).
  • The procedure calculates for each pair the studentized range statistic: where is the larger of the two means being compared, is the smaller, and is the standard error of the data in question.
  • Tukey's test is essentially a Student's t-test, except that it corrects for family-wise error-rate.

Holm's step-down procedure (1979)

  • Start by ordering the p-values (from lowest to highest) and let the associated hypotheses be
  • Let be the minimal index such that
  • Reject the null hypotheses . If then none of the hypotheses are rejected.

This procedure is uniformly more powerful than the Bonferroni procedure.[4] The reason why this procedure controls the family-wise error rate for all the m hypotheses at level α in the strong sense is, because it is a closed testing procedure. As such, each intersection is tested using the simple Bonferroni test.

Hochberg's step-up procedure

Hochberg's step-up procedure (1988) is performed using the following steps:[5]

  • Start by ordering the p-values (from lowest to highest) and let the associated hypotheses be
  • For a given , let be the largest such that
  • Reject the null hypotheses

Hochberg's procedure is more powerful than Holms'. Nevertheless, while Holm’s is a closed testing procedure (and thus, like Bonferroni, has no restriction on the joint distribution of the test statistics), Hochberg’s is based on the Simes test, so it holds only under non-negative dependence.

Dunnett's correction

Charles Dunnett (1955, 1966) described an alternative alpha error adjustment when k groups are compared to the same control group. Now known as Dunnett's test, this method is less conservative than the Bonferroni adjustment.

Scheffé's method

Resampling procedures

The procedures of Bonferroni and Holm control the FWER under any dependence structure of the p-values (or equivalently the individual test statistics). Essentially, this is achieved by accommodating a `worst-case' dependence structure (which is close to independence for most practical purposes). But such an approach is conservative if dependence is actually positive. To give an extreme example, under perfect positive dependence, there is effectively only one test and thus, the FWER is uninflated.

Accounting for the dependence structure of the p-values (or of the individual test statistics) produces more powerful procedures. This can be achieved by applying resampling methods, such as bootstrapping and permutations methods. The procedure of Westfall and Young (1993) requires a certain condition that does not always hold in practice (namely, subset pivotality).[6] The procedures of Romano and Wolf (2005a,b) dispense with this condition and are thus more generally valid.[7][8]

Harmonic mean p-value procedure

The harmonic mean p-value (HMP) procedure[9][10] provides a multilevel test that improves on the power of Bonferroni correction by assessing the significance of groups of hypotheses while controlling the strong-sense family-wise error rate. The significance of any subset of the tests is assessed by calculating the HMP for the subset,

where are weights that sum to one (i.e. ). An approximate procedure that controls the strong-sense family-wise error rate at level approximately rejects the null hypothesis that none of the p-values in subset are significant when (where ). This approximation is reasonable for small (e.g. ) and becomes arbitrarily good as approaches zero. An asymptotically exact test is also available (see main article).

Alternative approaches

FWER control exerts a more stringent control over false discovery compared to false discovery rate (FDR) procedures. FWER control limits the probability of at least one false discovery, whereas FDR control limits (in a loose sense) the expected proportion of false discoveries. Thus, FDR procedures have greater power at the cost of increased rates of type I errors, i.e., rejecting null hypotheses that are actually true.[11]

On the other hand, FWER control is less stringent than per-family error rate control, which limits the expected number of errors per family. Because FWER control is concerned with at least one false discovery, unlike per-family error rate control it does not treat multiple simultaneous false discoveries as any worse than one false discovery. The Bonferroni correction is often considered as merely controlling the FWER, but in fact also controls the per-family error rate.[12]

References

  1. Hochberg, Y.; Tamhane, A. C. (1987). Multiple Comparison Procedures. New York: Wiley. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-471-82222-6.
  2. Dmitrienko, Alex; Tamhane, Ajit; Bretz, Frank (2009). Multiple Testing Problems in Pharmaceutical Statistics (1 ed.). CRC Press. p. 37. ISBN 9781584889847.
  3. Dmitrienko, Alex; Tamhane, Ajit; Bretz, Frank (2009). Multiple Testing Problems in Pharmaceutical Statistics (1 ed.). CRC Press. p. 37. ISBN 9781584889847.
  4. Aickin, M; Gensler, H (1996). "Adjusting for multiple testing when reporting research results: the Bonferroni vs Holm methods". American Journal of Public Health. 86 (5): 726–728. doi:10.2105/ajph.86.5.726. PMC 1380484. PMID 8629727.
  5. Hochberg, Yosef (1988). "A Sharper Bonferroni Procedure for Multiple Tests of Significance" (PDF). Biometrika. 75 (4): 800–802. doi:10.1093/biomet/75.4.800.
  6. Westfall, P. H.; Young, S. S. (1993). Resampling-Based Multiple Testing: Examples and Methods for p-Value Adjustment. New York: John Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-55761-6.
  7. Romano, J.P.; Wolf, M. (2005a). "Exact and approximate stepdown methods for multiple hypothesis testing". Journal of the American Statistical Association. 100 (469): 94–108. doi:10.1198/016214504000000539. hdl:10230/576.
  8. Romano, J.P.; Wolf, M. (2005b). "Stepwise multiple testing as formalized data snooping". Econometrica. 73 (4): 1237–1282. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.198.2473. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0262.2005.00615.x.
  9. Good, I J (1958). "Significance tests in parallel and in series". Journal of the American Statistical Association. 53 (284): 799–813. doi:10.1080/01621459.1958.10501480. JSTOR 2281953.
  10. Wilson, D J (2019). "The harmonic mean p-value for combining dependent tests". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA. 116 (4): 1195–1200. doi:10.1073/pnas.1814092116. PMC 6347718. PMID 30610179.
  11. Shaffer, J. P. (1995). "Multiple hypothesis testing". Annual Review of Psychology. 46: 561–584. doi:10.1146/annurev.ps.46.020195.003021. hdl:10338.dmlcz/142950.
  12. Frane, Andrew (2015). "Are per-family Type I error rates relevant in social and behavioral science?". Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods. 14 (1): 12–23. doi:10.22237/jmasm/1430453040.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.