> Interesting. > I did a analysis on the numbers given above using the 2 tailed student > paired t-test. The p value is 0.033812. This would mean that that > there is 96.6% probability that this is not a random occurrence and > the seasonal effect is real.
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Thank you for an insightful article. I am glad to see that at least one other person sees the emperor has no clothes. Meanwhile, the stock market today is acting like happy days are just around the corner. But the economic and financial math says the piper must be paid for the past 7-10 years of housing and credit excesses. House prices will continue to plummet, banks will fail, the economy will tank, unemployment will rise, and the recession will morph quickly into a major depression that make take years to recover from.
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Sounds like a lot PhD envy. Inappropriate, offensive, and irrelevant. If you have a comment on the substance of the posting, do so without bashing the person's educational background.
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On Apr 30 10:45 AM E Nuff Sed wrote:
> Interesting.
> I did a analysis on the numbers given above using the 2 tailed student
> paired t-test. The p value is 0.033812. This would mean that that
> there is 96.6% probability that this is not a random occurrence and
> the seasonal effect is real.
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