Abstract

The jackknife technique was tested by fitting a two-exponential function to the time course of disappearance of radioactivity from the area of a wheat leaf that had been fed 14CO 2. The function was fitted by both unweighted and weighted least squares, first without and then with the jackknife. Weighting altered the estimates of the function's parameters, but jackknifing did not. Hence jackknifing did not remove any of the bias introduced by incorrect weighting. The confidence limits of the parameters calculated by jackknifing were greater than those estimated from the variance-covariance matrix of the regression, but similar to those derived from replicate experiments. The jackknife also allowed confidence limits for the rate constants and transit time of the underlying two-compartment model to be derived.

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