Estimability and Likelihood Inference for Generalized Linear Mixed Models Using Data Cloning
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5255699
DOI10.1198/jasa.2010.tm09757zbMath1388.62220OpenAlexW2013385108MaRDI QIDQ5255699
Khurram Nadeem, Byron Schmuland, Subhash R. Lele
Publication date: 17 June 2015
Published in: Journal of the American Statistical Association (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1198/jasa.2010.tm09757
Asymptotic distribution theory in statistics (62E20) Bayesian inference (62F15) Generalized linear models (logistic models) (62J12) Diagnostics, and linear inference and regression (62J20)
Related Items
Likelihood inference in generalized linear mixed measurement error models ⋮ An ANOVA test for parameter estimability using data cloning with application to statistical inference for dynamic systems ⋮ Data cloning: maximum likelihood estimation of DSGE models ⋮ Spherical radial approximation for nested mixed effects models ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Structural and practical identifiability issues of immuno-epidemiological vector-host models with application to Rift Valley Fever ⋮ Approximate maximum likelihood estimation using data-cloning ABC ⋮ Likelihood inference for small area estimation using data cloning ⋮ Normality of Posterior Distribution Under Misspecification and Nonsmoothness, and Bayes Factor for Davies' Problem ⋮ Maximum likelihood estimation of Gaussian copula models for geostatistical count data ⋮ Likelihood Inference for Spatial Generalized Linear Mixed Models ⋮ Likelihood inference in generalized linear mixed models with two components of dispersion using data cloning ⋮ Zero‐inflated spatio‐temporal models for disease mapping ⋮ Assessing ecosystem state space models: identifiability and estimation ⋮ Sensitivity and identification quantification by a relative latent model complexity perturbation in Bayesian meta‐analysis ⋮ Spatio–temporal modeling for disease mapping using CAR and B‐spline smoothing ⋮ Spatiotemporal modeling of odds of disease ⋮ Improving inference for nonlinear state‐space models of animal population dynamics given biased sequential life stage data ⋮ Estimating multiple-membership logit models with mixed effects: indirect inference versus data cloning ⋮ Estimation of zero-inflated parameter-driven models via data cloning ⋮ A marginalized multilevel model for bivariate longitudinal binary data ⋮ Simultaneous Inference for Empirical Best Predictors With a Poverty Study in Small Areas ⋮ A hybrid data cloning maximum likelihood estimator for stochastic volatility models ⋮ Inference for dynamic and latent variable models via iterated, perturbed Bayes maps ⋮ Nonparametric identifiability in species distribution and abundance models: why it matters and how to diagnose a lack of it using simulation ⋮ Practical likelihood analysis for spatial generalized linear mixed models ⋮ Projecting Dynamic Life Tables Using Data Cloning ⋮ The subset argument and consistency of MLE in GLMM: answer to an open problem and beyond ⋮ Likelihood inference in small area estimation by combining time-series and cross-sectional data ⋮ Spatial modeling using frequentist approach for disease mapping ⋮ Likelihood analysis for a class of beta mixed models ⋮ Fast and Accurate Binary Response Mixed Model Analysis via Expectation Propagation ⋮ Data-cloning \(SMC^2\): a global optimizer for maximum likelihood estimation of latent variable models ⋮ On the estimability of the PV single‐diode model parameters ⋮ Data cloning estimation of GARCH and COGARCH models ⋮ Bayesian measurement error models using finite mixtures of scale mixtures of skew-normal distributions ⋮ Non‐parametric generalized linear mixed models in small area estimation ⋮ Data cloning estimation for asymmetric stochastic volatility models ⋮ Continuous-time discrete-space models for animal movement ⋮ Models for paired comparison data: a review with emphasis on dependent data ⋮ Kim, Y., Choi, Y.-K., and Emery, S. (2013), “Logistic Regression With Multiple Random Effects: A Simulation Study of Estimation Methods and Statistical Packages,” The American Statistician, 67, 171-182