Thanks so much Mike. You are a great great presenter. I loved all your videos and can't thank you enough for your contribution to education. Blessings.
Thank you so much, Mike! Can I use the same technique for ordinal logistic regression as well? I am struggling with a big dataset where I have 162 countries and 20 years of data, and my DV is ordered, so I am trying to create a fixed-effect Ordinal model using this technique. If yes, where will I place the dummy variables-- in covariates or factors in the regression box? Sorry for the long-winded comment, but could really use the help 🙏
Hi, thank you for this video, really great stuff. Is there a possibility to use an additional variable and check for moderating effects on the relationship between the independent and depentend variable with this method?
If you have a large number of ids, you could use generalized estimating equations (gee) in spss. Another option for analysis is multilevel modeling in spss. Cheers
The dummy codes option is so useful and time-saving. I dummy-coded variables each by each before watching your videos.
Thanks so much Mike. You are a great great presenter. I loved all your videos and can't thank you enough for your contribution to education. Blessings.
This video was an absolute life-saver. Thank you!
Very clear explanation, thank you so much for making the video!
Thank you so much, Mike! Can I use the same technique for ordinal logistic regression as well? I am struggling with a big dataset where I have 162 countries and 20 years of data, and my DV is ordered, so I am trying to create a fixed-effect Ordinal model using this technique. If yes, where will I place the dummy variables-- in covariates or factors in the regression box? Sorry for the long-winded comment, but could really use the help 🙏
Hi, thank you for this video, really great stuff. Is there a possibility to use an additional variable and check for moderating effects on the relationship between the independent and depentend variable with this method?
maravilha. show!!. thinks for the PowerPoint.
You're welcome!
اريد معرفة كيف تكتب المعادلة في هته الحالة بشكل عام
Hi Mike is this the only way to do fixed effects in SPSS if you have thousands of ID variables?
If you have a large number of ids, you could use generalized estimating equations (gee) in spss. Another option for analysis is multilevel modeling in spss. Cheers
Can we use without dummy