Hello again, Thanks for your quick response. In addition to my previous question, I would also like to learn what the default analysis in Qdec is actually doing. For example, as I said previously, I have only one patient and a group of control participants. In that case, in my data table I'm giving a discrete "group" factor (patient, control) and the volume values of brain areas I'm interested in (several continuous factors). Then, I'm choosing "group" as my Selected factor (under Subject exclusions). When I say 'analyze', what the default analysis of Qdec is actually doing? Which statistics exactly? Since I have only one patient, is it computing the patient's mean as 0?
Thanks in advance, Buse. -- Hi Buse, I think this is a two-sample t-test where the 2nd sample is your individual. You should be able to this in qdec doug -- 2014-03-05 14:52 GMT+02:00 Buse Merve Ürgen <buseur...@gmail.com>: > Hello, > > I would like to learn whether we can conduct one-sample t-test using Qdec. > I'm working on a single-case study, and I want to compare a single > subject's data with a group of controls (to see how this specific subject > is different from the group) in terms of volume, thickness and > meancurvature. As far as I know, we can do the analysis in Terminal, but I > would like to see & have the brain figure output (cluster by cluster) in > Qdec for one sample t-test as well. Is it possible? > > Thanks in advance, > > Buse. >
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