Abstract

Results are given of an empirical power study of three statistical procedures for testing for exponentiality of several independent samples. The test procedures are the Tiku (1974) test, a multi-sample Durbin (1975) test, and a multi-sample Shapiro–Wilk (1972) test. The alternative distributions considered in the study were selected from the gamma, Weibull, Lomax, lognormal, inverse Gaussian, and Burr families of positively skewed distributions. The general behavior of the conditional mean exceedance function is used to classify each alternative distribution. It is shown that Tiku's test generally exhibits overall greater power than either of the other two test procedures. For certain alternative distributions, Shapiro–Wilk's test is superior when the sample sizes are small.

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