Thank you so much. I have a question, when i was taught longitudinal analysis, my professor used the lme() function and utilized correlation structures (exponential, unstructured, ...e.t.c). What is the difference between the lme() and the lmer().
Thank you for these wonderful videos, they are very helpful. Just a small comment: it would be very helpful to discuss in which situation which model should be used. For example, when the researchers should use a nonlinear negative exponential mixed effect models and how they should choose random and fixed effects. Unfortunately, I did not have time to go through all the videos. Please skip my comment if you have already discussed these points.
was trying to follow along but the data you are working with is not the same data in the session1 data file for both 2018 and 2021. where is the data you are working with in the video?
Thank you for such a lucid explanation and visualization of longitudinal analysis
Great video and course materials, thanks for sharing.
Thanks so much for such wonderful video! I always confused by the treatment coding of the interaction in R. Thanks for explaining this!
Thank you very much for these clear explanations.
Great video!! I love the explanations!
Thank you so much!!
Thank you so much. I have a question, when i was taught longitudinal analysis, my professor used the lme() function and utilized correlation structures (exponential, unstructured, ...e.t.c). What is the difference between the lme() and the lmer().
15:45 nicee explanation, thanks!
gracias
Thank you for these wonderful videos, they are very helpful. Just a small comment: it would be very helpful to discuss in which situation which model should be used. For example, when the researchers should use a nonlinear negative exponential mixed effect models and how they should choose random and fixed effects. Unfortunately, I did not have time to go through all the videos. Please skip my comment if you have already discussed these points.
Great work Dr. Keith Lohse
Thank you very much. Glad it was helpful!
Thank you very much for this very helpful video.
Glad it was helpful!
was trying to follow along but the data you are working with is not the same data in the session1 data file for both 2018 and 2021. where is the data you are working with in the video?
ccol. thanks
Thank you. Glad it was helpful!