Skip to main content
added 1 characters in body
Source Link
rolando2
  • 12.9k
  • 1
  • 44
  • 66

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Edit: I see I was in error. What standardizing does do, though, is reduce collinearity forwith product terms (interaction terms).

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Edit: I see I was in error. What standardizing does do, though, is reduce collinearity for product terms (interaction terms).

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Edit: I see I was in error. What standardizing does do, though, is reduce collinearity with product terms (interaction terms).

Corrected an error.
Source Link
rolando2
  • 12.9k
  • 1
  • 44
  • 66

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Edit: I see I was in error. What standardizing does do, though, is reduce collinearity for product terms (interaction terms).

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.

Edit: I see I was in error. What standardizing does do, though, is reduce collinearity for product terms (interaction terms).

Source Link
rolando2
  • 12.9k
  • 1
  • 44
  • 66

Standardization is a common way to reduce collinearity. (You should be able to verify very quickly that it works by trying it out on a couple of pairs of variables.) Whether you do it routinely depends on how much of a problem collinearity is in your analyses.