Abstract

AbstractVarious measures in two-way contingency table analysis have been proposed to express the strength of association between row and column variables in contingency tables. Tomizawa et al. (2004) proposed more general measures, including Cramér’s coefficient, using the power-divergence. In this paper, we propose measures using the f-divergence that has a wider class than the power-divergence. Unlike statistical hypothesis tests, these measures provide quantification of the association structure in contingency tables. The contribution of our study is proving that a measure applying a function that satisfies the condition of the f-divergence has desirable properties for measuring the strength of association in contingency tables. With this contribution, we can easily construct a new measure using a divergence that has essential properties for the analyst. For example, we conducted numerical experiments with a measure applying the $$\theta$$ θ -divergence. Furthermore, we can give further interpretation of the association between the row and column variables in the contingency table, which could not be obtained with the conventional one. We also show a relationship between our proposed measures and the correlation coefficient in a bivariate normal distribution of latent variables in the contingency tables.

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