Background

Statistical tests have become more and more important in medical research [13], but many publications have been reported to contain serious statistical errors [410]. In this regard, violation of distributional assumptions has been identified as one of the most common problems: According to Olsen [9], a frequent error is to use statistical tests that assume a normal distribution on data that are actually skewed. With small samples, Neville et al. [10] considered the use of parametric tests erroneous unless a test for normality had been conducted before. Similarly, Strasak et al. [7] criticized that contributors to medical journals often failed to examine and report that assumptions had been met when conducting Student’s t test.

Probably one of the most popular research questions is whether two independent samples differ from each other. Altman, for example, stated that “most clinical trials yield data of this type, as do observational studies comparing different groups of subjects” ([11], p. 191). In Student’s t test, the expectations of two populations are compared. The test assumes independent sampling from normal distributions with equal variance. If these assumptions are met and the null hypothesis of equal population means holds true, the test statistic T follows a t distribution with n X + n Y – 2 degrees of freedom:

T = m X m Y s 1 n X + 1 n Y ,
(1)

where m X and m Y are the observed sample means, n X and n Y are the sample sizes of the two groups, and s is an estimate of the common standard deviation. If the assumptions are violated, T is compared with the wrong reference distribution, which may result in a deviation of the actual Type I error from the nominal significance level [12, 13], in a loss of power relative to other tests developed for similar problems [14], or both. In medical research, normally distributed data are the exception rather than the rule [15, 16]. In such situations, the use of parametric methods is discouraged, and nonparametric tests (which are also referred to as distribution-free tests) such as the two-sample Mann–Whitney U test are recommended instead [11, 17].

Guidelines for contributions to medical journals emphasize the importance of distributional assumptions [18, 19]. Sometimes, special recommendations are provided. When addressing the question of how to compare changes from baseline in randomized clinical trials if data do not follow a normal distribution, Vickers, for example, concluded that such data are best analyzed with analysis of covariance [20]. In clinical trials, a detailed description of the statistical analysis is mandatory [21]. This description requires good knowledge about the clinical endpoints, which is often limited. Researchers, therefore, tend to specify alternative statistical procedures in case the underlying assumptions are not satisfied (e.g., [22]). For the t test, Livingston [23] presented a list of conditions that must be considered (e.g., normal distribution, equal variances, etc.). Consequently, some researchers routinely check if their data fulfill the assumptions and change the analysis method if they do not (for a review, see [24]).

In a preliminary test, a specific assumption is checked; the outcome of the pretest then determines which method should be used for assessing the main hypothesis [2528]. For the paired t test, Freidlin et al. ([29], p. 887) referred to as “a natural adaptive procedure (…) to first apply the Shapiro-Wilk test to the differences: if normality is accepted, the t test is used; otherwise the Wilcoxon signed ranked test is used.” Similar two-stage procedures including a preliminary test for normality are common for two-sample t tests [30, 31]. Therefore, conventional statistical practice for comparing continuous outcomes from two independent samples is to use a pretest for normality (H0: “The true distribution is normal” against H1: “The true distribution is non-normal”) at significance level α pre before testing the main hypothesis. If the pretest is not significant, the statistic T is used to test the main hypothesis of equal population means at significance level α . If the pretest is significant, Mann-Whitney’s U test may be applied to compare the two groups. Such a two-stage procedure ( Additional file 1) appears logical, and goodness-of-fit tests for normality are frequently reported in articles [3235].

Some authors have recently warned against preliminary testing [24, 3645]. First of all, theoretical drawbacks exist with regard to the preliminary testing of assumptions. The basic difficulty of a typical pretest is that the desired result is often the acceptance of the null hypothesis. In practice, the conclusion about the validity of, for example, the normality assumption is then implicit rather than explicit: Because insufficient evidence exists to reject normality, normality will be considered true. In this context, Schucany and Ng [41] speak about a “logical problem”. Further critiques of preliminary testing focused on the fact that assumptions refer to characteristics of populations and not to characteristics of samples. In particular, small to moderate sample sizes do not guarantee matching of the sample distribution with the population distribution. For example, Altman ([11], Figure 4.7, p. 60) showed that even sample sizes of 50 taken from a normal distribution may look non-normal. Second, some preliminary tests are accompanied by their own underlying assumptions, raising the question of whether these assumptions also need to be examined. In addition, even if the preliminary test indicates that the tested assumption does not hold, the actual test of interest may still be robust to violations of this assumption. Finally, preliminary tests are usually applied to the same data as the subsequent test, which may result in uncontrolled error rates. For the one-sample t test, Schucany and Ng [41] conducted a simulation study of the consequences of the two-stage selection procedure including a preliminary test for normality. Data were sampled from normal, uniform, exponential, and Cauchy populations. The authors estimated the Type I error rate of the one-sample t test, given that the sample had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality with a p value greater than α pre. For exponentially distributed data, the conditional Type I error rate of the main test turned out to be strikingly above the nominal significance level and even increased with sample size. For two-sample tests, Zimmerman [4245] addressed the question of how the Type I error and power are modified if a researcher’s choice of test (i.e., t test for equal versus unequal variances) is based on sample statistics of variance homogeneity. Zimmerman concluded that choosing the pooled or separate variance version of the t test solely on the inspection of the sample data does neither maintain the significance level nor protect the power of the procedure. Rasch et al. [39] assessed the statistical properties of a three-stage procedure including testing for normality and for homogeneity of the variances. The authors concluded that assumptions underlying the two-sample t test should not be pre-tested because “pre-testing leads to unknown final Type I and Type II risks if the respective statistical tests are performed using the same set of observations”. Interestingly, none of the studies cited above explicitly addressed the unconditional error rates of the two-stage procedure as a whole. The studies rather focused on the conditional error rates, that is, the Type I and Type II error of single arms of the two-stage procedure.

In the present study, we investigated the statistical properties of Student’s t test and Mann-Whitney’s U test for comparing two independent groups with different selection procedures. Similar to Schucany and Ng [41], the tests to be applied were chosen depending on the results of the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk tests for normality of the two samples involved. We thereby obtained an estimate of the conditional Type I error rates for samples that were classified as normal although the underlying populations were in fact non-normal, and vice-versa. This probability reflects the error rate researchers may face with respect to the main hypothesis if they mistakenly believe the normality assumption to be satisfied or violated. If, in addition, the power of the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test is taken into account, the potential impact of the entire two-stage procedure on the overall Type I error rate and power can be directly estimated.

Methods

In our simulation study, equally sized samples for two groups were drawn from three different distributions, covering a variety of shapes of data encountered in clinical research. Two selection strategies were examined for the main test to be applied. In Strategy I, the two-sample t test was conducted if both samples had passed the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test for normality; otherwise, we applied Mann-Whitney’s U test. In Strategy II, the t test was conducted if the residuals ( x i m X ) , ( y i m Y ) from both samples had passed the pretest; otherwise, we used the U test. The difference between the two strategies is that, in Strategy I, the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality is separately conducted on raw data from each sample, whereas in Strategy II, the preliminary test is applied only once, i.e. to the collapsed set of residuals from both samples.

Statistical language R 2.14.0 [46] was used for the simulations. Random sample pairs of size n X = n Y = 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 were generated from the following distributions: (1) exponential distribution with unit expectation and variance; (2) uniform distribution in [0, 1]; and (3) the standard normal distribution. This procedure was repeated until 10,000 pairs of samples had passed the preliminary screening for normality (either Strategy I or II, with α pre = .100, .050, .010, .005, or no pretest). For these samples, the null hypothesis μ X = μ Y was tested against the alternative μ X ≠ μ Y using Student’s t test at the two-sided significance level α  = .05. The conditional Type I errors rates (left arm of the decision tree in Additional file 1) were then estimated by the number of significant t tests divided by 10,000. The precision of the results thereby amounts to maximally ±1% (width of the 95% confidence interval for proportion 0.5). In a second run, sample generation was repeated until 10,000 pairs were collected that had failed preliminary screening for normality (Strategy I or II), and the conditional Type I error was estimated for Mann-Whitney’s U test (right part of Additional file 1).

Finally, 100,000 pairs of samples were generated from exponential, uniform, and normal distributions to assess the unconditional Type I error of the entire two-stage procedure. Depending on whether the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test was significant or not, Mann-Whitney’s U test or Student’s t test was conducted for the main analysis. The Type I error rate of the entire two-stage procedure was estimated by the number of significant tests (t or U ) and division by 100,000.

Results

Strategy I

The first strategy required both samples to pass the preliminary screening for normality to proceed with the two-sample t test; otherwise, we used Mann-Whitney’s U test. This strategy was motivated by the well-known assumption that the two-sample t test requires data within each of the two groups to be sampled from normally distributed populations (e.g., [11]).

Table 1 (left) summarizes the estimated conditional Type I error probabilities of the standard two-sample t test (i.e., t test assuming equal variances) at the two-sided nominal level α  = .05 after both samples had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality, as well as the unconditional Type I error rate of the t test without a pretest for normality. Figure 1 additionally plots the corresponding estimates if the underlying distribution was either (A) exponential, (B) uniform, or (C) normal. As can be seen from Table 1 and Figure 1, the unconditional two-sample t test (i.e., without pretest) was α -robust, even if the underlying distribution was exponential or uniform. In contrast, the observed conditional Type I error rates differed from the nominal significance level. For the exponential distribution, the selective application of the two-sample t test to pairs of samples that had been accepted as normal led to Type I error rates of the final t test that were considerably larger than α  = .05 (Figure 1A). Moreover, the violation of the significance level increased with sample size and α pre. For example, for n  = 30, the observed Type I error rates of the two-sample t test turned out to be 10.8% for α pre = .005 and even 17.0% for α pre = .100, whereas the unconditional Type I error rate was 4.7%. If the underlying distribution was uniform, the conditional Type I error rates declined below the nominal level, particularly as samples became larger and preliminary significance levels increased (Figure 1B). For normally distributed populations, conditional and unconditional Type I error rates roughly followed the nominal significance level (Figure 1C).

Table 1 Left: Estimated Type I error probability of the two-sample  t  test at  α = .05 after both samples had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality (Strategy I with  α  pre = .100, .050, .010, .005), and without pretest.—Right: Estimated Type I error of the  U  test for samples that failed testing for normality
Figure 1
figure 1

Estimated Type I error probability of the two-sample  t  test at  α = .05 after both samples had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality at  α  pre = .100, .050, .010, .005 (conditional), and without pretest (unconditional). Samples of equal size from the (A) exponential, (B) uniform, and (C) normal distribution.

For pairs in which at least one sample had not passed the pretest for normality, we conducted Mann-Whitney’s U test. The estimated conditional Type I error probabilities are summarized in Table 1 (right): For exponential samples, only a negligible tendency towards conservative decisions was observed, but samples from the uniform distribution, and, to a lesser extent, samples from the normal distribution proved problematic. In contrast to the pattern observed for the conditional t test, however, the nominal significance level was mostly violated in small samples and numerically low significance levels of the pretest (e.g., α pre = .005).

Strategy II

The two-sample t test is a special case of a linear model that assumes independent normally distributed errors. Therefore, the normality assumption can be examined through residuals instead of raw data. In linear models, residuals are defined as differences between observed and expected values. In the two-sample comparison, the expected value for a measurement corresponds to the mean of the sample from which it derived, so that the residual simplifies to the difference between the observed value and the sample mean. In regression modeling, the assumption of normality is often checked by the plotting of residuals after parameter estimation. However, this order may be reversed, and formal tests of normality based on residuals may be carried out. In Strategy II, one single Shapiro-Wilk test was applied to the collapsed set of residuals from both samples; thus, in contrast to Strategy I, only one pretest for normality had to be passed.

Table 2 (left) and Figure 2 show the estimated conditional Type I error probabilities of the two-sample t test at α  = .05 (two-sided) after residuals had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for the three different underlying distributions and for different α pre levels as well as the corresponding unconditional Type I error rates (i.e., without pretest). For the normal distribution, the conditional and the unconditional Type I error rates were very close to the nominal significance level for all sample sizes and α pre levels considered. Thus, if the underlying distribution was normal, the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test for normality of the residuals did not affect the Type I error probability of the subsequent two-sample t test.

Table 2 Left: Estimated Type I error probability of the two-sample  t  test at  α = .05 for samples that passed testing for normality of the residuals (Strategy II with  α  pre = .100, .050, .010, .005), and without pretest.—Right: Estimated Type I error for the  U  test for samples that failed testing for normality
Figure 2
figure 2

Estimated Type I error probability of the two-sample  t  test at  α = .05 after the residuals had passed the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality at  α  pre = .100, .050, .010, .005 (conditional), and without pretest (unconditional). Samples of equal size from the (A) exponential, (B) uniform, and (C) normal distribution.

For the two other distributions, the results were strikingly different. For samples from the exponential distribution, conditional Type I error rates were much larger than the nominal significance level (Figure 2A). For example, at α pre = .005, conditional Type I error rates ranged between 6.4% for n  = 10 up to 79.2% in samples of n  = 50. For the largest preliminary α pre level of .100, samples of n  = 30 reached error rates above 70%. Thus, the discrepancy between the observed Type I error rate and the nominal α was even more pronounced than for Strategy I and increased again with growing preliminary α pre and increasing sample size.

Surprisingly and in remarkable contrast to the results observed for Strategy I, samples from the uniform distribution that had passed screening for normality of residuals also led to conditional Type I error rates that were far above 5% (Figure 2B). The distortion of the Type I error rate was only slightly less extreme for the uniform than for the exponential distribution, resulting in error rates up to 50%. The conditional Type I error rate increased again with growing sample size and increasing preliminary significance level of the Shapiro-Wilk test. For example, at α pre = .100, conditional Type I error rates were between 6.5% for n  = 10 and even 52.9% for n  = 50. Similarly, in samples of n  = 50, the conditional Type I error rate was between 13.8% for α pre = .005 and 52.9% for α pre = .100, whereas the Type I error rate without pretest was close to 5.0%.

If the distribution of the residuals was judged as non-normal by the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test, the two samples were compared by means of Mann-Whitney’s U test (Table 2, right). As for Strategy I, the Type I error rate of the conditional U test was closest to the nominal α for samples from the exponential distribution. For samples from the uniform distribution, the U test did not fully exhaust the significance level but showed remarkably anti-conservative behavior for samples drawn from the normal distribution, which was most pronounced in small samples and numerically low α pre.

Entire two-stage procedure

Biased decisions within the two arms of the decision tree in Additional file 1 are mainly a matter of theoretical interest, whereas the unconditional Type I error and power of the two-stage procedure reflect how the algorithm works in practice. Therefore, we directly assessed the practical consequences of the entire two-stage procedure with respect to the overall, unconditional, Type I error. This evaluation was additionally motivated by the anticipation that, although the observed conditional Type I error rates of both the main parametric test and the nonparametric test were seriously altered by screening for normality, these results will rarely occur in practice because the Shapiro-Wilk test is very powerful in large samples. Again, pairs of samples were generated from exponential, uniform, and normal distributions. Depending on whether the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test was significant or not, Mann-Whitney’s U test or Student’s t test was conducted in the main analysis. Table 3 outlines the estimated unconditional Type I error rates. In line with this expectation, the results show that the two-stage procedure as a whole can be considered robust with respect to the unconditional Type I error rate. This holds true for all three distributions considered, irrespectively of the strategy chosen for the preliminary test.

Table 3: Estimated Type I error probability of the two-stage procedure (Student’s t  test or Mann-Whitney’s  U  test depending on preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test for normality) for different sample sizes and  α  pre

Because the two-stage procedure seemed to keep the nominal significance level, we additionally investigated the corresponding statistical power. To this end, 100,000 pairs of samples were drawn from unit variance normal distributions with means 0.0 and 0.6, from uniform distributions in [0.0, 1.0] and [0.2, 1.2], and from exponential distributions with rate parameters 1.0 and 2.0.

As Table 4 shows, statistical power to detect a shift in two normal distributions corresponds to the weighted sum of the power of the unconditional use of Student’s t test and Mann-Whitney’s U test. When both samples must pass the preliminary test for normality (Strategy I), the weights correspond to (1 – α pre)2 and 1 – (1 – α pre)2 respectively, which is consistent with the rejection rate of the Shapiro-Wilk test under the normality assumption. For Strategy II, the weights roughly correspond to 1 – α pre and α pre respectively (a minimal deviation can be expected here because the residuals from the two samples are not completely independent). Similar results were observed for shifted uniform distributions and exponential distributions with different rate parameters: In both distributions, the overall power of the two-stage procedure seemed to lie in-between the power estimated for the unconditional t test and the U test.

Table 4: Estimated power of the two-stage procedure for different sample sizes and  α  pre

Discussion

The appropriateness of a statistical test, which depends on underlying distributional assumptions, is generally not a problem if the population distribution is known in advance. If the assumption of normality is known to be wrong, a nonparametric test may be used that does not require normally distributed data. Difficulties arise if the population distribution is unknown—which, unfortunately, is the most common scenario in medical research. Many statistical textbooks and articles state that assumptions should be checked before conducting statistical tests, and that tests should be chosen depending on whether the assumptions are met (e.g., [22, 28, 47, 48]). Various options for testing assumptions are easily available and sometimes even automatically generated within the standard output of statistical software (e.g., see SAS or SPSS for the assumption of variance homogeneity for the t test; for a discussion see [4245]). Similarly, methodological guidelines for clinical trials generally recommend checking for conditions underlying statistical methods. According to ICH E3, for example, when presenting the results of a statistical analysis, researchers should demonstrate that the data satisfied the crucial underlying assumptions of the statistical test used [49]. Although it is well-known that decision-making after inspection of sample data can lead to altered Type I and Type II error probabilities and sometimes to spurious rejection of the null hypothesis, researchers are often confused or unaware of the potential shortcomings of such two-stage procedures.

Conditional Type I error rates

We demonstrated the dramatic effects of preliminary testing for normality on the conditional Type I error rate of the main test (see Tables 1 and 2, and Figures 1 and 2). Most of these consequences were qualitatively similar for Strategy I (separate preliminary test for each sample) and Strategy II (preliminary test based on residuals), but quantitatively more pronounced for Strategy II than for Strategy I. On the one hand, the results replicated those found for the one-sample t test [41]. On the other hand, our study revealed interesting new findings: Preliminary testing not only affects the Type I error of the t test on samples from non-normal distributions but also the performance of Mann-Whitney’s U test for equally sized samples from uniform and normal distributions. Since we focused on a two-stage procedure assuming homogenous variances, it can be expected that an additional test for homogeneity of variances should lead to a further distortion of the conditional Type I error rates (e.g., [39, 4245]).

Detailed discussion on potential reasons for the detrimental effects of preliminary tests is provided elsewhere [30, 41, 50]; therefore, only a global argument is given here: Exponentially distributed variables follow an exponential distribution, and uniformly distributed variables follow a uniform distribution. This trivial statement holds, regardless of whether a preliminary test for normality is applied to the data or not. A sample or a pair of samples is not normally distributed just because the result of the Shapiro-Wilk test suggests it. From a formal perspective, a sample is a set of fixed ‘realizations’; it is not a random variable which could be said to follow some distribution. The preliminary test cannot alter this basic fact; it can only select samples which appear to be drawn from a normal distribution. If, however, the underlying population is exponential, the preliminary test selects samples that are not representative of the underlying population. Of course, the Type I error rates of hypotheses tests are strongly altered if they are based on unrepresentative samples. Similarly, if the underlying distribution is normal, the pretest will filter out samples that do not appear normal with probability α pre. These latter samples are again not representative for the underlying population, so that the Type I error of the subsequent nonparametric test will be equally affected.

In general, the problem is that the distribution of the test statistic of the test of interest depends on the outcome of the pretest. More precisely, errors occurring at the preliminary stage change the distribution of the test statistic at the second stage [38]. As can be seen in Tables 1 and 2, the distortion of the Type I error observed for Strategy I and II is based on at least two different mechanisms. The first mechanism is related to the power of the Shapiro-Wilk test: For the exponential distribution, Strategy I considerably affects the t test, but Strategy II does so even more. As both tables show, distortion of the Type I error, if present, is most pronounced in large samples. In line with this result, Strategy II alters the conditional Type I error to a greater extent than Strategy I, probably because in Strategy II, the pretest is applied to the collapsed set of residuals, that is, the pretest is based on a sample twice the size of that used in Strategy I.

To illustrate the second mechanism, asymmetry, we consider the interesting special case of Strategy I applied to samples from uniform distribution. In Strategy I, Mann-Whitney’s U test was chosen if the pretest for normality failed in at least one sample. Large violations of the nominal significance level of Mann-Whitney’s U test were observed for small samples and numerically low significance levels for the pretest (23.3% for α pre = .005 and n  = 10). At α pre = .005 and n  = 10, the Shapiro-Wilk test has low power, so that only samples with extreme properties will be identified. In general, however, samples from the uniform distribution do not have extreme properties, such that, in most cases, only one member of the sample pair will be sufficiently extreme to be detected by the Shapiro-Wilk test. Consequently, pairs of samples are selected by the preliminary test for which one member is extreme and the other member is representative; the main significance test will then indicate that the samples differ indeed. For these pairs of samples, the Shapiro-Wilk test and the Mann–Whitney U test essentially yield the same result because they test similar hypotheses. In contrast, in Strategy II, the pretest selected pairs of samples for which the set of residuals (i.e., the two samples shifted over each other) appeared non-normal. This result mostly corresponds to the standard situation in nonparametric statistics, so that the conditional Type I error rate of Mann-Whitney’s U test applied to samples from uniform distribution was unaffected by the asymmetry mechanism.

Type I error and power of the entire two-stage procedure

On the one hand, our study showed that conditional Type I error rates may heavily deviate from the nominal significance level (Tables 1 and 2). On the other hand, direct assessment of the unconditional Type I error rate (Table 3) and power (Table 4) of the two-stage procedure suggests that the two-stage procedure as a whole has acceptable statistical properties. What might be the reason for this discrepancy? To assess the consequences of preliminary tests for the entire two-stage procedure, the power of the pretest needs to be taken into account,

P TypeIerror = P TypeIerror Pretest n . s . + P TypeIerror Pretest s i g . = P TypeIerror | Pretest n . s . × P Pretest n . s . + P TypeIerror | Pretest s i g . × P Pretest s i g . ,
(2)

with P(Type I error | Pretest n.s. ) denoting the conditional Type I error rate of the t test (Tables 1 and 2 left), P(Type I error | Pretest sig. ) denoting the conditional Type I error rate of the U test (Tables 1 and 2 right), and P(Pretest sig. ) and P(Pretest n.s. ) denoting the power and 1 – power of the pretest for normality. In Strategy I, P(Pretest sig. ) corresponds to the probability to reject normality for at least one of the two samples, whereas in Strategy II, it is the probability to reject the assumption of normality of the residuals from both samples.

For the t test, unacceptable rates of false decisions due to selection effects of the preliminary Shapiro-Wilk test occur for large samples and numerically high significance levels α pre (e.g., left column in Table 2). In these settings, however, the Shapiro-Wilk test detects deviations from normality with nearly 100% power, so that the Student’s t test is practically never used. Instead, the nonparametric test is used that seems to protect the Type I error for those samples. This pattern of results holds for both Strategy I and Strategy II. Conversely, it was demonstrated above that Mann-Whitney’s U test is biased for normally distributed data if the sample size is low and the preliminary significance level is strict (e.g., α pre = .005, right columns of Tables 1 or 2). For samples from normal distribution, however, deviation from normality is only rarely detected at α pre = .005, so that the consequences for the overall Type I error of the entire two-stage procedure are again very limited.

A similar argument holds for statistical power: For a given alternative, the overall power of the two-stage procedure corresponds, by construction, to the weighted sum of the conditional power of the t test and U test. When populations deviate only slightly from normality, the pretest for normality has low power, and the power of the two-stage procedure will tend towards the unconditional power of Student’s t test; this fact only does not hold in those rare cases in which the preliminary test indicates non-normality, so that the slightly less powerful Mann–Whitney U test is applied. When the populations deviate considerably from normality, the power of the Shapiro-Wilk test is high for both strategies, and the overall power of the two-stage procedure will tend towards the unconditional power of Mann-Whitney’s U test.

Finally, it should be emphasized that the conditional Type I error rates shown in Tables 1 and 2 correspond to the rather unlikely scenario in which researchers would continue sampling until the assumptions are met. In contrast, the unconditional Type I error and power of the two-stage procedure are most relevant because in practice, researchers do not continue sampling until they obtain normality. Researchers who do not know in advance whether the underlying population distribution is normal, usually base their decision on the samples obtained. If by chance a sample from a non-normal distribution happens to look normal, the researcher could falsely assume that the normality assumption holds. However, this chance is rather low because of the high power of the Shapiro-Wilk test, particularly for larger sample sizes.

Conclusions

From a formal perspective, preliminary testing for normality is incorrect and should therefore be avoided. Normality has to be established for the populations under consideration; if this is not possible, “support for the assumption of normality must come from extra-data sources” ([30], p. 7). For example, when planning a study, assumptions may be based on the results of earlier trials [21] or pilot studies [36]. Although often limited in size, pilot studies could serve to identify substantial deviations from normality. From a practical perspective, however, preliminary testing does not seem to cause much harm, at least for the cases we have investigated. The worst that can be said is that preliminary testing is unnecessary: For large samples, the t test has been shown to be robust in many situations [5155] (see also Tables 1 and 2 of the present paper) and for small samples, the Shapiro-Wilk test lacks power to detect deviations from normality. If the application of the t test is doubtful, the unconditional use of nonparametric tests seems to be the best choice [56].