Timeline for Likelihood ratio test vs p value for Poisson regression
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 29, 2023 at 3:19 | history | became hot network question | |||
Jul 28, 2023 at 21:57 | vote | accept | user344849 | ||
Jul 28, 2023 at 21:54 | answer | added | Ben Bolker | timeline score: 8 | |
Jul 28, 2023 at 21:41 | comment | added | Ben Bolker |
@whuber, I believe that it's true that "there are many different ways ...", but glm() would be the obvious one (and the only one built into base R ...??)
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Jul 28, 2023 at 19:40 | comment | added | whuber♦ |
It would help to disclose the details. There are many different ways to perform Poisson regression in R .
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Jul 28, 2023 at 19:39 | comment | added | user344849 | Thanks for the comment! I am using the R, no, the p-value is different in two cases | |
Jul 28, 2023 at 19:30 | comment | added | whuber♦ | It depends on which method your software uses to compute the p-value for gender: there are several options. But ordinarily that test and the LR test give the same p-value (because often they are mathematically equivalent). Have you, therefore, performed both tests on the same data and compared the results? | |
Jul 28, 2023 at 19:19 | history | asked | user344849 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |