MIXNO
MIXNO: A computer program for mixed-effects nominal logistic regression. MIXNO provides maximum marginal likelihood estimates for mixed-effects nominal logistic regression analysis. These models can be used for analysis of correlated nominal response data, for example, data arising from a clustered or longitudinal design. For such data, the mixed-effects model assumes that data within clusters or sub jects are dependent. The degree of dependency is jointly estimated with the usual model parameters, thus adjusting for dependence resulting from nesting of the data. MIXNO uses marginal maximum likelihood estimation, utilizing a Fisher-scoring solution. For the scoring solution, the Cholesky factor of the random-effects variance-covariance matrix is estimated along with the (fixed) effects of explanatory variables. Examples illustrating usage and features of MIXNO are provided.
This software is also peer reviewed by journal JSS.
This software is also peer reviewed by journal JSS.
Keywords for this software
References in zbMATH (referenced in 9 articles , 1 standard article )
Showing results 1 to 9 of 9.
Sorted by year (- Feddag, M.-L.: Composite likelihood estimation for multivariate probit latent traits models (2013)
- de Rooij, Mark: Transitional ideal point models for longitudinal multinomial outcomes (2011)
- Fox, Jean Paul: Bayesian item response modeling. Theory and applications. (2010)
- Meza, Cristian; Jaffrézic, Florence; Foulley, Jean-Louis: Estimation in the probit normal model for binary outcomes using the SAEM algorithm (2009)
- Hwa, Yen Siew: Conjoint analysis: an application in eliciting patient’s preferences (2006)
- Skrondal, Anders; Rabe-Hesketh, Sophia: Generalized latent variable modeling. Multilevel, longitudinal, and structural equation models. (2004)
- Skrondal, Anders; Rabe-Hesketh, Sophia: Multilevel logistic regression for polytomous data and rankings (2003)
- Böckenholt, Ulf: Mixed-effects analyses of rank-ordered data (2001)
- Donald Hedeker: MIXNO: a computer program for mixed-effects nominal logistic regression (1999) not zbMATH