Thanks for your response, however it seems to me that the
Anderson-Darling Test and the Shapiro-Wilk test are both tests of
composite normality, at least as implemented in R. I.e. they test
whether it is reasonable to assume that the data came from any normal
distribution, not specifically the standard normal. Consider the
p-values that come from the following code.

 

> qq <- rnorm(100,3,4)

> ks.test(qq, "pnorm")

 

        One-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov test

 

data:  qq 

D = 0.5614, p-value < 2.2e-16

alternative hypothesis: two-sided 

 

> shapiro.test(qq)

 

        Shapiro-Wilk normality test

 

data:  qq 

W = 0.9831, p-value = 0.2286

 

 

 

Alan Herschtal 
Senior Biostatistician 
Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre 

Phone +61 3 9656 3639
Fax +61 3 9656 1420 
Email alan.hersch...@petermac.org

  

________________________________

From: Mark Lamias [mailto:mlam...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Friday, 9 November 2012 2:22 PM
To: Rolf Turner; Herschtal Alan
Cc: r-help@r-project.org
Subject: Re: [R] Looking for a test of standard normality



The Anderson-Darling Test and the Shapiro-Wilk test have considerably
more power.

I'd refer you to a non-R related discussion board for statistics related
questions.  Perhaps the following might be more useful:

http://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/8184/most-powerful-gof-test-for
-normality

Sincerely yours,

Mark J. Lamias





________________________________

From: Rolf Turner <rolf.tur...@xtra.co.nz>
To: Herschtal Alan <alan.hersch...@petermac.org> 
Cc: r-help@r-project.org 
Sent: Thursday, November 8, 2012 10:16 PM
Subject: Re: [R] Looking for a test of standard normality



Others may correct me, but I cannot imagine any test of standard
normality
giving appreciably more power than is given by the Kolmogorov-Smirnov
test.

I also wonder about the point of testing for (standard) normality in the
first place.  There is a quote --- I think it refers to testing for
heteroscedasticity,
but I believe it applies equally to testing for normality  --- about
such testing
being analogous to going out of the harbour in a rowing dinghy to see if
it's
safe for an ocean liner to put to sea.

    cheers,

        Rolf Turner

On 09/11/12 13:23, Herschtal Alan wrote:
> Dear list members,
> 
> I am looking for a goodness of test that will tell me if a sample is
> likely to have come from a standard normal distribution. I can find
> plenty of omnibus tests for normality in the nor.test package, but
none
> of them appear to allow me to test against the specific alternative
that
> the data are not standard normal. My back up option is to use a
> Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, but my impression is that that is not a very
> powerful test. Any suggestions?

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