Research Papers
http://ir.iuiu.ac.ug/xmlui/handle/20.500.12309/122
2024-03-29T05:43:21ZOn empirical power of univariate normality tests under symmetric, asymmetric, and scaled distributions
http://ir.iuiu.ac.ug/xmlui/handle/20.500.12309/563
On empirical power of univariate normality tests under symmetric, asymmetric, and scaled distributions
Nafiu, Lukman Abiodun; Ibitayo, Lanlege David; Muyombya, Solomon Matovu
The study aims at conducting an empirical comparison of powers of the univariate normality tests under different distributions to obtain their ranking using a Monte-Carlo simulation for large sample sizes. A total of six normality tests were selected. From the Empirical Distribution Function (EDF), the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (Lilliefors correction) and Anderson-Darling normality tests were chosen. From the regression and correlation family of distributions, the Shapiro-Wilk and Shapiro-Francia normality tests were chosen. The Jaque-Bera and D’Agostino Pearson normality tests were chosen from the moment family. The empirical powers of these normality tests were studied using distributions that are symmetric, asymmetric and scale contaminated normal distributions.
Findings show that for symmetric distributions, Kolmogorov-Smirnov normality test is the most powerful test, followed by Anderson-Darling, Shapiro-Wilk, Shapiro-Francia, D'Agostino-Pearson and lastly Jaque-Bera. For asymmetric distributions, the Anderson-Darling normality test was best, followed by Shapiro-Wilk, Kolmogorov-Smirnov, Jaque-Bera, Shapiro-Francia and lastly D’Agostino. For scale contaminated distributions, Kolmogorov-Smirnov is the most powerful test, followed by Anderson-Darling, Shapiro-Francia, Shapiro-Wilk, D'Agostino-Pearson and lastly Jaque-Bera. Thus, regardless of the nature of the distribution given a large sample size, Kolmogorov-Smirnov is the most powerful normality test, followed by Shapiro-Wilk, Shapiro-Francia, Anderson-Darling, Jaque-Bera and lastly D'Agostino-Pearson.
The study recommends that for distributions that have short tails like symmetric distributions, correlation/regression-based tests should be used. For long tailed distributions like symmetric distributions, Empirical-based normality tests should be used and moment-based tests should be used if interest is in kurtosis and skewness of the data.
2017-01-01T00:00:00Z