Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models
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Average customer review:Product Description
Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models is a comprehensive manual for the applied researcher who wants to perform data analysis using linear and nonlinear regression and multilevel models. The book introduces a wide variety of models, whilst at the same time instructing the reader in how to fit these models using available software packages. The book illustrates the concepts by working through scores of real data examples that have arisen from the authors' own applied research, with programming codes provided for each one. Topics covered include causal inference, including regression, poststratification, matching, regression discontinuity, and instrumental variables, as well as multilevel logistic regression and missing-data imputation. Practical tips regarding building, fitting, and understanding are provided throughout. Author resource page: http://www.stat.columbia.edu/~gelman/arm/
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #55139 in Books
- Published on: 2006-12-18
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 648 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models ... careful yet mathematically accessible style is generously illustrated with examples and graphical displays, making it ideal for either classroom use or self-study. It appears destined to adorn the shelves of a great many applied statisticians and social scientists for years to come."
Brad Carlin, University of Minnesota
"Gelman and Hill have written what may be the first truly modern book on modeling. Containing practical as well as methodological insights into both Bayesian and traditional approaches, Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models provides useful guidance into the process of building and evaluating models. For the social scientist and other applied statisticians interested in linear and logistic regression, causal inference, and hierarchical models, it should prove invaluable either as a classroom text or as an addition to the research bookshelf."
Richard De Veaux, Williams College
"The theme of Gelman and Hill's engaging and nontechnical introduction to statistical modeling is 'Be flexible.' Using a broad array of examples written in R and WinBugs, the authors illustrate the many ways in which readers can build more flexibility into their predictive and causal models. This hands-on textbook is sure to become a popular choice in applied regression courses."
Donald Green, Yale University
"Simply put, Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models is the best place to learn how to do serious empirical research. Gelman and Hill have written a much needed book that is sophisticated about research design without being technical. Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models is destined to be a classic!"
Alex Tabarrok, George Mason University
"a detailed, carefully written exposition of the modelling challenge, using numerous convincing examples, and always paying careful attention to the practical aspects of modeling. I recommend it very warmly."
Journal of Applied Statistics
"Gelman and Hill's book is an excellent intermediate text that would be very useful for researchers interested in multilevel modeling... This book gives a wealth of information for anyone interested in multilevel modeling and seems destined to be a classic."
Brandon K. Vaughn, Journal of Eductional Measurement
About the Author
Andrew Gelman is Professor of Statistics and Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. He has published over 150 articles in statistical theory, methods, and computation, and in applications areas including decision analysis, survey sampling, political science, public health, and policy. His other books are Bayesian Data Analysis (1995, second edition 2003) and Teaching Statistics: A Bag of Tricks (2002).
Jennifer Hill is Assistant Professor of Public Affairs in the Department of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. She has co-authored articles that have appeared in the Journal of the American Statistical Association, American Political Science Review, American Journal of Public Health, Developmental Psychology, the Economic Journal and the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, among others.
Customer Reviews
Integrated Material
Gelman and Hill have put together a fabulously well-integrated look at general modeling with a focus on hierarchical structures. The book starts with simple modeling principles and continues well into material that would satisfy a third semester course in many social science grad programs. This book does something that is extremely hard: presenting serious technical ideas without overwhelming language and detail, making the chapters unusally easy to read and digest. They also do a very nice job of balancing Bayesian and traditional approaches without denigrating or over-promoting either. This should considerably broaden the appeal. Furthermore, the emphasis on R and WinBugs means that readers can immediately (and for free) run through the techniques.
I see this book as primarily a teaching tool, although many will use it as a reference. In this light, it is without peer right now in terms of coverage (basically all of the standard/basic regression models that get taught to social science grad students), price/page ratio (0.15366), and accessibility. Many of us have used econometric texts for such purposes over the years, living with a slightly mismatched set of criteria to rely on the quality of these works (Greene, Mittlehammer et al., etc.), but now there is a competitor that fits much more nicely with non-economic methods training (less of a fixation with asymptotics, no need for 200 named flavors of each model, and so on). Finally, the practical advice and admonitations that accompany the model descriptions will be immensely helpful to practitioners.
very broad coverage of data analysis with hierarchical models
Andrew Gelman is a top researcher in Bayesian statistics as well as an excellent writer. He has written an excellent text on Bayesian data analysis that uses the Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods for dealing with hierarchical linear models. This book starts out on an introductory level covering a wide variety of statistical modeling problems including logistic regression and multilevel logistic regression, generalized linear models and causal inference. The MCMC methods are taught using BUGS and R. This book is not exclusively Bayesian as both likelihood and Bayesian procedures are presented. The topics are general but the emphasis is on social science applications. It is very comprehensive and has received enthusiastic reviews from well known statisticians including Dick Deveaux, Brad Carlin and Jeff Gill. Jeff's review is here on amazon. Jeff is a colleague of mine and he has written one of the finest introductory texts on Bayesian methods including the hierarchical models. His text is now out in its second edition. Jeff also wrote his book with the social scientists in mind.
Jeff's review has been the most looked at and voted the most helpful on this site. As this topic is a specialty area for him more than it is for me, I recommend that if you are interested in the material in this book that his review is very much worth reading.
Fantastic Blend of Theory and Practical Advice
I came to this text with a very pragmatic need: I needed power calculations of a multi-level model, and I needed them fast. I skipped directly to Chapter 20, which is the most accessible treatment of multi-level power-calculations I have ever read. A few hours later, I had the calculations I needed done. (Take home point: this book has a wonderfully practical side.)
To my surprise, I also really understood what I had done, why I had done it, and other approaches that I might have taken. That is, the text very effectively provides the broader theoretical overview, gives a concise real-statistics treatment, and pragmatically teaches you how to actually do the analyses you need to do. Gelman & Hill have that rare ability to both teach the abstract and directly help you do the practical. (Fans of Paul Allison's books will love this one, too.) This is a must-have for the shelf, and I am sure I will come back to it repeatedly.




