AuthorChristensen, Ronald. author
TitleLog-Linear Models and Logistic Regression [electronic resource] / by Ronald Christensen
ImprintNew York, NY : Springer New York, 1997
Edition Second Edition
Connect tohttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b97647
Descript XVI, 484 p. online resource

SUMMARY

As the new title indicates, this second edition of Log-Linear Models has been modi?ed to place greater emphasis on logistic regression. In addition to new material, the book has been radically rearranged. The fundamental material is contained in Chapters 1-4. Intermediate topics are presented in Chapters 5 through 8. Generalized linear models are presented in Ch- ter 9. The matrix approach to log-linear models and logistic regression is presented in Chapters 10-12, with Chapters 10 and 11 at the applied Ph.D. level and Chapter 12 doing theory at the Ph.D. level. The largest single addition to the book is Chapter 13 on Bayesian bi- mial regression. This chapter includes not only logistic regression but also probit and complementary log-log regression. With the simplicity of the Bayesian approach and the ability to do (almost) exact small sample s- tistical inference, I personally ?nd it hard to justify doing traditional large sample inferences. (Another possibility is to do exact conditional inference, but that is another story.) Naturally,Ihavecleaneduptheminor?awsinthetextthatIhavefound. All examples, theorems, proofs, lemmas, etc. are numbered consecutively within each section with no distinctions between them, thus Example 2.3.1 willcomebeforeProposition2.3.2.Exercisesthatdonotappearinasection at the end have a separate numbering scheme. Within the section in which it appears, an equation is numbered with a single value, e.g., equation (1)


CONTENT

Two-Dimensional Tables and Simple Logistic Regression -- Three-Dimensional Tables -- Logistic Regression, Logit Models, and Logistic Discrimination -- Independence Relationships and Graphical Models -- Model Selection Methods and Model Evaluation -- Models for Factors with Quantitative Levels -- Fixed and Random Zeros -- Generalized Linear Models -- The Matrix Approach to Log-Linear Models -- The Matrix Approach to Logit Models -- Maximum Likelihood Theory for Log-Linear Models -- Bayesian Binomial Regression


SUBJECT

  1. Mathematics
  2. Algebra
  3. Applied mathematics
  4. Engineering mathematics
  5. Probabilities
  6. Mathematics
  7. Probability Theory and Stochastic Processes
  8. Applications of Mathematics
  9. Algebra