Hi Jan,
Rubin's original books will help you here, (Donald. B Rubin, Multiple
imputation for nonresponse in surveys and Little and Rubin ,1987,
Statistical Analysis with missing data) also subsequent articles by them
and/or based on their work. It depends on what you want to do with the
statistics, how you aggregate the estimates, and the se's are combined in
such a way to take into consideration the between and within imputation
variance.
Hope this Helps
Harry M
On Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 8:14 PM, <student09(a)web.de> wrote:
Hi
I am new to multiple imputation and so my question is apparently very
basic. But still: So far I was unable to find any examples showing
how to report results based on, say, 5 imputated datasets. How should one
report the results -
*simply* take the average for each regression coeff./s.e. across all
imputed datasets?
Many thanks
Jan
________________________________________________________________
Neu: WEB.DE Doppel-FLAT mit Internet-Flatrate + Telefon-Flatrate
für nur 19,99 Euro/mtl.!*
http://produkte.web.de/go/02/
-
Amelia mailing list served by Harvard-MIT Data Center
[Un]Subscribe/View Archive:
http://lists.gking.harvard.edu/?info=amelia
More info about Amelia:
http://gking.harvard.edu/amelia