| Type: | Package |
| Title: | Estimation of the log Likelihood of the Saturated Model |
| Version: | 0.2.1.5 |
| Date: | 2025-06-02 |
| Author: | Jorge Villalba |
| Maintainer: | Jorge Villalba <jvillalba@utb.edu.co> |
| Description: | When the values of the outcome variable Y are either 0 or 1, the function lsm() calculates the estimation of the log likelihood in the saturated model. This model is characterized by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976) in section 2.3 through the assumptions 1 and 2. The function LogLik() works (almost perfectly) when the number of independent variables K is high, but for small K it calculates wrong values in some cases. For this reason, when Y is dichotomous and the data are grouped in J populations, it is recommended to use the function lsm() because it works very well for all K. |
| Depends: | R (≥ 3.5.0) |
| Imports: | stats, dplyr (≥ 1.0.0), ggplot2 (≥ 1.0.0) |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| License: | MIT + file LICENSE |
| RoxygenNote: | 7.3.1 |
| Repository: | CRAN |
| LazyLoad: | yes |
| LazyData: | yes |
| NeedsCompilation: | no |
| Packaged: | 2025-06-02 16:57:49 UTC; jvillalba |
| Date/Publication: | 2025-06-02 17:30:01 UTC |
Coronary Heart Disease Study
Description
Coronary Heart Disease Study
Usage
chdage
Format
A data frame with 100 observations on the following 3 variables.
IDidentification code
AGEage in years
CHDpresence (1) or absence (0) of evidence of significant coronary heart disease
References
Hosmer, D. (2013). Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics Ser. : Applied Logistic Regression (3). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.
Examples
# data(chdage)
# maybe str(chdage) ; plot(chdage) ...
Confidence Intervals for lsm Objects
Description
Provides a confint method for lsm objects.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'lsm'
confint(object, parm, level = 0.95, ...)
Arguments
object |
The type of prediction required. The default is on the scale of the linear predictors. The alternative |
parm |
calculate confidence intervals for the coefficients |
level |
It gives the desired confidence level for the confidence interval. For example, a default value is level = 0.95, which will generate a 95
The alternative |
... |
further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
Details
confint Method for lsm
The saturated model is characterized by the assumptions 1 and 2 presented in section 2.3 by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976).
Value
lsm returns an object of class "lsm".
An object of class "lsm" is a list containing at least the
following components:
object |
a |
parm |
calculate confidence intervals for the coefficients. |
level |
confidence levels |
... |
Additional arguments to be passed to methods. |
Author(s)
Jorge Villalba Acevedo [cre, aut], (Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar, Cartagena-Colombia).
References
[1] LLinás, H. J. (2006). Precisiones en la teoría de los modelos logísticos. Revista Colombiana de Estadística, 29(2), 239–265. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/estad/article/view/29310
[2] Hosmer, D.W., Lemeshow, S. and Sturdivant, R.X. (2013). Applied Logistic Regression, 3rd ed., New York: Wiley.
[3] Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992). Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Examples
# datos <- lsm::icu
# attach(datos)
# modelo <- lsm(STA~AGE + as.factor(RACE), data=icu)
# confint(modelo)
icu
Description
icu
Usage
icu
Format
A data frame with 200 observations on the following 21 variables.
IDa numeric vector
STAa numeric vector
AGEa numeric vector
GENDERa numeric vector
RACEa numeric vector
SERa numeric vector
CANa numeric vector
CRNa numeric vector
INFa numeric vector
CPRa numeric vector
SYSa numeric vector
HRAa numeric vector
PREa numeric vector
TYPa numeric vector
FRAa numeric vector
PO2a numeric vector
PHa numeric vector
PCOa numeric vector
BICa numeric vector
CREa numeric vector
LOCa numeric vector
References
Hosmer, D. (2013). Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics Ser. : Applied Logistic Regression (3). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.
Examples
# data(icu)
# maybe str(icu) ; plot(icu) ...
lowbwt
Description
lowbwt
Usage
lowbwt
Format
A data frame with 189 observations on the following 11 variables.
IDa numeric vector
SMOKEa numeric vector
RACEa numeric vector
AGEa numeric vector
LWTa numeric vector
BWTa numeric vector
LOWa numeric vector
PTLa numeric vector
HTa numeric vector
UIa numeric vector
FTVa numeric vector
References
Hosmer, D. (2013). Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics Ser. : Applied Logistic Regression (3). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.
Examples
# data(lowbwt)
# maybe str(lowbwt) ; plot(lowbwt) ...
Estimation of the log Likelihood of the Saturated Model
Description
When the values of the outcome variable Y are either 0 or 1, the function lsm() calculates the estimation of the log likelihood in the saturated model. This model is characterized by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976) in section 2.3 through the assumptions 1 and 2. If Y is dichotomous and the data are grouped in J populations, it is recommended to use the function lsm() because it works very well for all K.
Usage
lsm(formula, family = binomial, data = environment(formula), ...)
Arguments
formula |
An expression of the form y ~ model, where y is the outcome variable (binary or dichotomous: its values are 0 or 1). |
family |
an optional funtion for example binomial. |
data |
an optional data frame, list or environment (or object coercible by as.data.frame to a data frame) containing the variables in the model. If not found in data, the variables are taken from environment(formula), typically the environment from which |
... |
further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
Details
Estimation of the log Likelihood of the Saturated Model
An expression of the form y ~ model is interpreted as a specification that the response y is modelled by a linear predictor specified symbolically by model (systematic component). Such a model consists of a series of terms separated by + operators. The terms themselves consist of variable and factor names separated by : operators. Such a term is interpreted as the interaction of all the variables and factors appearing in the term. Here, y is the outcome variable (binary or dichotomous: its values are 0 or 1).
Value
lsm returns an object of class "lsm".
An object of class "lsm" is a list containing at least the
following components:
coefficients |
Vector of coefficients estimations (intercept and slopes). |
coef |
Vector of coefficients estimations (intercept and slopes). |
Std.Error |
Vector of the coefficients’s standard error (intercept and slopes). |
ExpB |
Vector with the exponential of the coefficients (intercept and slopes). |
Wald |
Value of the Wald statistic (with chi-squared distribution). |
DF |
Degree of freedom for the Chi-squared distribution. |
P.value |
P-value calculated with the Chi-squared distribution. |
Log_Lik_Complete |
Estimation of the log likelihood in the complete model. |
Log_Lik_Null |
Estimation of the log likelihood in the null model. |
Log_Lik_Logit |
Estimation of the log likelihood in the logistic model. |
Log_Lik_Saturate |
Estimation of the log likelihood in the saturate model. |
Populations |
Number of populations in the saturated model. |
Dev_Null_vs_Logit |
Value of the test statistic (Hypothesis: null vs logistic models). |
Dev_Logit_vs_Complete |
Value of the test statistic (Hypothesis: logistic vs complete models). |
Dev_Logit_vs_Saturate |
Value of the test statistic (Hypothesis: logistic vs saturated models). |
Df_Null_vs_Logit |
Degree of freedom for the test statistic’s distribution (Hypothesis: null vs logistic models). |
Df_Logit_vs_Complete |
Degree of freedom for the test statistic’s distribution (Hypothesis: logistic vs saturated models). |
Df_Logit_vs_Saturate |
Degree of freedom for the test statistic’s distribution (Hypothesis: logistic vs saturated models). |
P.v_Null_vs_Logit |
P-value for the hypothesis test: null vs logistic models. |
P.v_Logit_vs_Complete |
P-value for the hypothesis test: logistic vs complete models. |
P.v_Logit_vs_Saturate |
P-value for the hypothesis test: logistic vs saturated models. |
Logit |
Vector with the log-odds. |
p_hat_complete |
Vector with the probabilities that the outcome variable takes the value 1, given the |
p_hat_null |
Vector with the probabilities that the outcome variable takes the value 1, given the |
p_j |
Vector with the probabilities that the outcome variable takes the value 1, given the |
odd |
Vector with the values of the odd in each |
OR |
Vector with the values of the odd ratio for each coefficient of the variables. |
z_j |
Vector with the values of each |
n_j |
Vector with the |
p_j_tilde |
Vector with the estimation of each |
v_j |
Vector with the variance of the Bernoulli variables in the |
m_j |
Vector with the expected values of |
V_j |
Vector with the variances of |
V |
Variance and covariance matrix of |
S_p |
Score vector in the saturated model. |
I_p |
Information matrix in the saturated model. |
Zast_j |
Vector with the values of the standardized variable of |
mcov |
Variance and covariance matrix for coefficient estimates. |
mcor |
Correlation matrix for coefficient estimates. |
Esm |
Data frame with estimates in the saturated model. It contains for each population |
Elm |
Data frame with estimates in the logistic model. It contains for each population |
call |
It displays the original call that was used to fit the model lsm. |
data |
data envarironment. |
... |
Additional arguments to be passed to methods. |
Author(s)
Dr. rer. nat. Humberto LLinás Solano [aut] (Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla-Colombia); MSc. Omar Fábregas Cera [aut] (Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla-Colombia); MSc. Jorge Villalba Acevedo [cre, aut] (Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar, Cartagena-Colombia).
References
[1] LLinás, H. J. (2006). Precisiones en la teoría de los modelos logísticos. Revista Colombiana de Estadística, 29(2), 239–265. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/estad/article/view/29310
[2] Hosmer, D.W., Lemeshow, S. and Sturdivant, R.X. (2013). Applied Logistic Regression, 3rd ed., New York: Wiley.
[3] Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992). Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
See Also
Examples
#library(lsm)
#1. AGE and Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Status of 20 subjects:
#AGE <- c(20,23,24,25,25,26,26,28,28,29,30,30,30,30,30,30,30,32,33,33)
#CHD <- c(0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0)
#data <- data.frame (CHD, AGE )
#lsm(CHD ~ AGE , data)
#2.You can use the following notation:
#lsm(y~., data)
#3. Other example:
#y <- c(1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1)
#x1 <- c(2, 2, 2, 5, 5, 5, 5, 8, 8, 11, 11, 11)
#data <- data.frame (y, x1)
#ELAINYS <-lsm(y ~ x1, data)
#summary(ELAINYS)
#4. Other example:
#y <- as.factor(c(1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1))
#x1 <- as.factor(c(2, 2, 2, 5, 5, 5, 5, 8, 8, 11, 11, 11))
#data <- data.frame (y, x1)
#ELAINYS1 <-lsm(y ~ x1, family=binomial, data)
#summary(ELAINYS1)
Graphics Method for lsm Objects
Description
Obtains graphics from a fitted lsm object.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'lsm'
plot(
x,
type = c("scatter", "probability", "Logit", "odds"),
title = NULL,
xlab = NULL,
ylab = NULL,
color = "red",
size = 1.5,
shape = 19,
...
)
Arguments
x |
The LSM model object. |
type |
The type of plot to draw. Options are "scatter" for a scatter plot, "probability" for a probability plot, "Logit" for a plot related to logistic regression, and "odds" for a plot related to odds. |
title |
The title of the plot. |
xlab |
The label for the x-axis. |
ylab |
The label for the y-axis. |
color |
The color of the dots in the plot. |
size |
The size of the dots in the plot. |
shape |
The shape oof the dots in the plot. |
... |
Additional graphical arguments to be passed to ggplot. |
Details
Gráfico de regresión logística
The saturated model is characterized by the assumptions 1 and 2 presented in section 2.3 by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976).
Value
Un objeto ggplot. following components:
Author(s)
Jorge Villalba Acevedo [cre, aut], (Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar, Cartagena-Colombia).
References
[1] LLinás, H. J. (2006). Precisiones en la teoría de los modelos logísticos. Revista Colombiana de Estadística, 29(2), 239–265. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/estad/article/view/29310
[2] Hosmer, D.W., Lemeshow, S. and Sturdivant, R.X. (2013). Applied Logistic Regression, 3rd ed., New York: Wiley.
[3] Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992). Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Examples
#library(lsm)
#1. AGE and Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Status of 100 subjects:
# library(lsm)
# library(tidyverse)
# datos <- lsm::chdage
# attach(datos)
# modelo <- lsm(CHD ~ AGE, data=datos)
# plot(modelo, type = "scatter")
# plot(modelo, type = "scatter", title = "Villalba-llinas lsm")
# plot(modelo, type = "probability", xlab = "Elainys")
# plot(modelo, type = "Logit", color = "blue")
# plot(modelo, type = "odds", size = 3)
Predictions and Confidence intervals
Description
Obtains predictions and confidence intervals from a fitted lsm object.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'lsm'
predict(
object,
newdata,
type = c("link", "response", "odd", "OR"),
level = 0.95,
...
)
Arguments
object |
A fitted object of class |
newdata |
Optionally, a data frame in which to look for variables with which to predict. |
type |
The type of prediction required. The alternatives |
level |
Confidence level to use (default is 0.95). |
... |
Further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
Details
Predict Method for lsm Fits
If newdata is omitted, a matrix with the predictions for each observation is obtained. That is to say, the predictions are based on the data used for the fit. In that case how cases with missing values in the original fit is determined by the na.action argument of that fit. If na.action = na.omit omitted cases will not appear in the residuals, whereas if na.action = na.exclude they will appear (in predictions and standard errors), with residual value NA.
The saturated model is characterized by the assumptions 1 and 2 presented in section 2.3 by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976).
Value
The option type =... returns a matrix with one column containing the requested predictions. The option interval =... returns a matrix with 3 columns containing the lower and upper extremes of the requested interval and the corresponding predictions.
Author(s)
Dr. rer. nat. Humberto LLinás Solano [aut] (Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla-Colombia); MSc. Omar Fábregas Cera [aut] (Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla-Colombia); MSc. Jorge Villalba Acevedo [cre, aut] (Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar, Cartagena-Colombia).
References
[1] LLinás, H. J. (2006). Precisiones en la teoría de los modelos logísticos. Revista Colombiana de Estadística, 29(2), 239–265. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/estad/article/view/29310
[2] Hosmer, D.W., Lemeshow, S. and Sturdivant, R.X. (2013). Applied Logistic Regression, 3rd ed., New York: Wiley.
[3] Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992). Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Examples
#library(lsm)
#1. AGE and Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Status of 20 subjects:
# library(lsm)
# library(tidyverse)
# datos <- lsm::chdage
# attach(datos)
# modelo <- lsm(CHD ~ AGE, data=datos)
# head(predict(modelo, type = "link"))
# predict(modelo,newdata=data.frame(AGE=35),type = "response")
# head(predict(modelo, type = "odd"))
# head(predict(modelo, type = "OR"))
pros
Description
pros
Usage
pros
Format
A data frame with 380 observations on the following 9 variables.
IDa numeric vector
CAPSULEa numeric vector
AGEa numeric vector
RACEa numeric vector
DPROSa numeric vector
DCAPSa numeric vector
PSAa numeric vector
VOLa numeric vector
GLEASONa numeric vector
References
Hosmer, D. (2013). Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics Ser. : Applied Logistic Regression (3). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.
Examples
# data(pros)
# maybe str(pros) ; plot(pros) ...
Summarizing Method for lsm Objects
Description
Provides a summary method for lsm objects.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'lsm'
summary(object, ...)
Arguments
object |
An expression of the form y ~ model, where y is the outcome variable (binary or dichotomous: its values are 0 or 1). |
... |
further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
Details
summary Method for lsm
The saturated model is characterized by the assumptions 1 and 2 presented in section 2.3 by Llinas (2006, ISSN:2389-8976).
Value
An object of class "lsm" is a list containing at least the
following components:
object |
a |
... |
Additional arguments to be passed to methods. |
Author(s)
Jorge Villalba Acevedo [cre, aut], (Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar, Cartagena-Colombia).
References
[1] LLinás, H. J. (2006). Precisiones en la teoría de los modelos logísticos. Revista Colombiana de Estadística, 29(2), 239–265. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/estad/article/view/29310
[2] Hosmer, D.W., Lemeshow, S. and Sturdivant, R.X. (2013). Applied Logistic Regression, 3rd ed., New York: Wiley.
[3] Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992). Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Examples
#Hosmer, D. (2013) page 3: Age and coranary Heart Disease (CHD) Status of 20 subjects:
#AGE <- c(20, 23, 24, 25, 25, 26, 26, 28, 28, 29, 30, 30, 30, 30, 30, 30, 30, 32, 33, 33)
#CHD <- c(0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0)
# data <- data.frame (CHD, AGE)
# Ela <- lsm(CHD ~ AGE, family = binomial, data)
# summary(Ela)
survey
Description
The data was collected by applying a survey to a sample of university students.
Usage
survey
Format
A data frame (tibble) with 800 observations and 66 variables, which are described below:
ObservationStudent.
IDIdentification code.
GenderGender of the student, 1 = Female; 2 = Male.
LikeWhat do you do most often in your free time? 1 = Network (Check social networks); 2 = TV (Watch TV).
AgeAge of the student (in years), Numeric vector from 12.0 to 30.0
SmokeDo you smoke? 0 = No; 1 = Yes.
HeightHeight of the student (in meters), Numeric vector from 1.50 to 1.90.
WeightWeight of the student (in kilograms), numeric vector from 49 to 120.
BMIBody mass index of the student (kg/m^2), numeric vector from 14 to 54.
SchoolType of school students come from, 1 = Private; 2 = Public.
SESSocio-economic stratus of the student, 1 = Low; 2 = Medium; 3 = High.
EnrollmentWhat was your type funding to study at the university? 1 = Credit; 2 = Scholarship; 3 = Savings.
ScorePercentage of success in a certain test, numeric vector from 0 to 100%
MotherHeightHeight of the mother of the student (in meters), numeric vector 1 = Short; 2 = Normal; 3 = Tall.
MotherAgeAge of the mother of the student (in years), numeric vector from 39 to 89.
MotherCHDHas your mother had coronary heart disease? 0 = No; 1 = Yes.
FatherHeightHeight of the father of the student (in meters), numeric vector 1 = Short; 2 = Normal; 3 = Tall.
FatherAgeAge of the father of the student (in years), numeric vector from 39 to 89
FatherCHDHas your fatner had coronary heart diseasea, 1 = No; 2 = Yes.
StatusStudent's academic status at the end of the previous semester, 1 = Distinguished; 2 = Normal; 3 = Regular.
SemAcumAverage of all final grades in the previous semester, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
Exam1First exam taken last semester, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
Exam2Second exam taken last semester, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
Exam3Third exam taken last semester, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
Exam4Last exam taken last semester, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
ExamAcumSum of the four exams mentioned above, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
DefinitiveAverage of the four exams mentioned above, numeric vector from 0.0 to 5.0
ExpenseAverage of your monthly expenses (in 10 thousand Colombian pesos), numeric vector from 23.0 to 90.0
IncomeFather's monthly income (in millions of Colombian pesos), numeric vector from 1.0 to 3.0
GasValue paid for gas service in the last month (in thousands of Colombian pesos), numeric vector from 15.0 to 28.0
CourseWhat type of virtual classes do you prefer? 1 = Virtual; 2 = Face-to-face.
LawOpinion on a law, 1 = In disagreement; 2=Agree
EconomicHow was your family's economy during the pandemic? 1 = Bad; 2 = Regular; 3 = Good.
RaceDoes the student belong to an ethnic group? 1=None; 2= Ethnic
RegionRegion of the country where the student comes from, 1 = North; 2 = Center; 3 = South.
EMO1During this period of preventative isolation, you frequently become nervous or restless for no reason, 1 = Never, 2 = Rarely; 3 = Almost always; 4 = Always.
EMO2During this period of preventative isolation, you are often irritable, 1 = Never, 2 = Rarely; 3 = Almost always; 4 = Always.
EMO3During this period of preventive isolation, you are often sad or despondent, 1 = Never, 2 = Rarely; 3 = Almost always; 4 = Always
EMO4During this period of preventive isolation, you are often easily frightened, 1 = Never, 2 = Rarely; 3 = Almost always; 4 = Always
EMO5During this period of preventative isolation, you often have trouble thinking clearly, 1 = Never, 2 = Rarely; 3 = Almost always; 4 = Always
GOAL1I am concerned that I may not be able to understand the contents of my subjects this semester as thoroughly as I would like, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
GOAL2It is important for me to do better than other students in my subjects this semester, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
GOAL3I am concerned that I may not learn all that I can learn in my subjects this semester, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Pre_STAT1I like statistics, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Pre_STAT2I don't focus when I make problems statistics, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Pre_STAT3I don't understand statistics much because of my way of thinking, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Pre_STAT4I use statistics in everyday life, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Post_STAT1I like statistics, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Post_STAT2I don't focus when I make problems statistics, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Post_STAT3I don't understand statistics much because of my way of thinking, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Post_STAT4I use statistics in everyday life, 1 = Strongly agree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Undecided; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly agree.
Pre_IDARE1I feel calm, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Pre_IDARE2I feel safe, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Pre_IDARE3I feel nervous, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Pre_IDARE4I'm stressed, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Pre_IDARE5I am comfortable, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Post_IDARE1I feel calm, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Post_IDARE2I feel safe, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Post_IDARE3I feel nervous, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Post_IDARE4I'm stressed, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
Post_IDARE5I am comfortable, 1=Nothing; 2= Little; 3= Quite a bit; 4= A lot.
PSICO1I feel good, 1=Almost never; 2= Sometimes; 3= Frequently; 4= Almost always.
PSICO2I get tired quickly, 1=Almost never; 2= Sometimes; 3= Frequently; 4= Almost always.
PSICO3I feel like crying, 1=Almost never; 2= Sometimes; 3= Frequently; 4= Almost always.
PSICO4I would like to be as happy as others seem to be, 1=Almost never; 2= Sometimes; 3= Frequently; 4= Almost always.
PSICO5I lose opportunities for not being able to decide quickly, 1=Almost never; 2= Sometimes; 3= Frequently; 4= Almost always.
Details
survey
Examples
# data(survey)
# maybe str(survey) ; plot(survey) ...
uis
Description
uis
Usage
uis
Format
A data frame with 575 observations on the following 9 variables.
IDa numeric vector
AGEa numeric vector
BECKa numeric vector
IVHXa numeric vector
NDRUGTXa numeric vector
RACEa numeric vector
TREATa numeric vector
SITEa numeric vector
DFREEa numeric vector
References
Hosmer, D. (2013). Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics Ser. : Applied Logistic Regression (3). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.
Examples
# data(uis)
# maybe str(uis) ; plot(uis) ...