Calculates the inverse of the right-tailed chi-squared distribution.
Sample Usage
CHIINV(0.42, 2)
CHIINV(A2, B2)
Syntax
CHIINV(probability, degrees_freedom)
-
probability- The probability associated with the right-tailed chi-squared distribution.- Must be greater than
0and less than1.
- Must be greater than
-
degrees_freedom- The number of degrees of freedom of the distribution.
Notes
degrees_freedomis truncated to an integer if a non-integer is provided.degrees_freedommust be at least1.- All arguments must be numeric.
CHIINVis synonymous withCHISQ.INV.RT.
See Also
CHIDIST: Calculates the right-tailed chi-squared distribution, often used in hypothesis testing.
CHISQ.INV: Calculates the inverse of the left-tailed chi-squared distribution.
CHISQ.INV.RT: Calculates the inverse of the right-tailed chi-squared distribution.
CHITEST: Returns the probability associated with a Pearson’s chi-squared test on the two ranges of data. Determines the likelihood that the observed categorical data is drawn from an expected distribution.
FINV: Calculates the inverse of the right-tailed F probability distribution. Also called the Fisher-Snedecor distribution or Snedecor’s F distribution.
TINV: Calculates the inverse of the two-tailed TDIST function.
Example
Suppose you want to find the cutoff for the chi-squared statistic associated with a p-value of 0.05. With 4 degrees of freedom, you can consider any chi-squared statistic larger than 9.49 to be statistically significant.
| 1 | Probability | Degrees freedom | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 0.05 | 4 | 9.487729037 |
| 3 | 0.05 | 4 | =CHIINV(0.05, 4) |
| 4 | 0.05 | 4 | =CHIINV(A2, B2) |