% File src/library/stats/man/poisson.test.Rd % Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2011 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{poisson.test} \alias{poisson.test} \title{Exact Poisson tests} \description{ Performs an exact test of a simple null hypothesis about the rate parameter in Poisson distribution, or for the ratio between two rate parameters. } \usage{ poisson.test(x, T = 1, r = 1, alternative = c("two.sided", "less", "greater"), conf.level = 0.95) } \arguments{ \item{x}{number of events. A vector of length one or two.} \item{T}{time base for event count. A vector of length one or two. } \item{r}{hypothesized rate or rate ratio} \item{alternative}{indicates the alternative hypothesis and must be one of \code{"two.sided"}, \code{"greater"} or \code{"less"}. You can specify just the initial letter.} \item{conf.level}{confidence level for the returned confidence interval.} } \details{ Confidence intervals are computed similarly to those of \code{\link{binom.test}} in the one-sample case, and using \code{\link{binom.test}} in the two sample case. } \value{ A list with class \code{"htest"} containing the following components: \item{statistic}{the number of events (in the first sample if there are two.)} \item{parameter}{the corresponding expected count} \item{p.value}{the p-value of the test.} \item{conf.int}{a confidence interval for the rate or rate ratio.} \item{estimate}{the estimated rate or rate ratio.} \item{null.value}{the rate or rate ratio under the null, \code{r}.} \item{alternative}{a character string describing the alternative hypothesis.} \item{method}{the character string \code{"Exact Poisson test"} or \code{"Comparison of Poisson rates"} as appropriate.} \item{data.name}{a character string giving the names of the data.} } \note{ The rate parameter in Poisson data is often given based on a \dQuote{time on test} or similar quantity (person-years, population size, or expected number of cases from mortality tables). This is the role of the \code{T} argument. The one-sample case is effectively the binomial test with a very large \code{n}. The two sample case is converted to a binomial test by conditioning on the total event count, and the rate ratio is directly related to the odds in that binomial distribution. } \seealso{ \code{\link{binom.test}} } \examples{ ### These are paraphrased from data sets in the ISwR package ## SMR, Welsh Nickel workers poisson.test(137, 24.19893) ## eba1977, compare Fredericia to other three cities for ages 55-59 poisson.test(c(11, 6+8+7), c(800, 1083+1050+878)) } \keyword{htest}