A primer on fixed-effects and fixed-effects panel modeling using R, Stata, and SPSS
Details
Download: Fixed-Effects and Fixed-Effects Panel Modeling (Preprint).pdf (1975.10 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
License: Not specified
State: Public
Version: author
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_41F1D19666F9
Type
Autre: use this type when nothing else fits.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A primer on fixed-effects and fixed-effects panel modeling using R, Stata, and SPSS
Language
english
Abstract
Fixed-effects modeling is a powerful tool for estimating within-cluster associations in cross-sectional data and within-participant associations in longitudinal data. Although commonly used by other social scientists, this tool remains largely unknown to psychologists. To address this issue, we offer a pedagogical primer tailored for this audience, complete with R, Stata, and SPSS scripts. This primer is organized into three parts. In PART 1, we show how fixed-effects modeling applies to clustered cross-sectional data. We introduce the concepts of ‘cluster dummies’ and ‘demeaning,’ and provide scripts to estimate the within-school association between sports and depression in a fictional dataset. In PART 2, we show how fixed-effects modeling applies to longitudinal data, and provide scripts to estimate the within-participant association between sports and depression over time in a fictional four-wave dataset. In this part, we cover three additional topics. First, we explain how to calculate effect sizes and offer simulation-based sample size guidelines to detect median-sized within-participant effects with sufficient power. Second, we show how to test two possible interactions: between a time-constant and a time-varying predictor and between two time-varying predictors. Third, we introduce three relevant extensions: first-difference modeling (estimating changes from one wave to the next); time-distributed fixed-effects modeling (estimating changes before, during, and after an individual event); and within-between multilevel modeling (estimating both within- and between-participant associations). In PART 3, we discuss two limitations of fixed-effects modeling: time-varying confounders and reverse causality. We conclude with reflections on causality in nonexperimental data.
Keywords
Primer, Fixed Effects, Fixed-Effects Panel, Dummies, Demeaning, Cluster, Two-Way Fixed-Effects, Interaction, First Difference, Time-Distributed Fixed-Effects, Within-Between Multilevel, Longitudinal, Causality
Create date
11/12/2024 13:10
Last modification date
12/12/2024 7:36