When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Panel data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panel_data

    Cross-panel data (CPD) is an innovative yet underappreciated source of information in the mathematical and statistical sciences. CPD stands out from other research methods because it vividly illustrates how independent and dependent variables may shift between countries. This panel data collection allows researchers to examine the connection ...

  3. Cross-sectional data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-sectional_data

    Cross-sectional data differs from time series data, in which the same small-scale or aggregate entity is observed at various points in time. Another type of data, panel data (or longitudinal data), combines both cross-sectional and time series data aspects and looks at how the subjects (firms, individuals, etc.) change over a time series. Panel ...

  4. Panel analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panel_analysis

    Panel (data) analysis is a statistical method, widely used in social science, epidemiology, and econometrics to analyze two-dimensional (typically cross sectional and longitudinal) panel data. [1] The data are usually collected over time and over the same individuals and then a regression is run over these two dimensions.

  5. Pooled analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pooled_analysis

    Unlike meta-analyses, pooled analyses can only be conducted if the included studies used the same study design and statistical models, and if their respective populations were homogeneous. If individual-level data from the included studies is available, the result of a pooled analysis can be considered more reliable. [3]

  6. Partial likelihood methods for panel data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partial_likelihood_methods...

    Partial (pooled) likelihood estimation for panel data is a quasi-maximum likelihood method for panel analysis that assumes that density of given is correctly specified for each time period but it allows for misspecification in the conditional density of = (, …,) given = (, …,).

  7. Time series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_series

    One way to tell is to ask what makes one data record unique from the other records. If the answer is the time data field, then this is a time series data set candidate. If determining a unique record requires a time data field and an additional identifier which is unrelated to time (e.g. student ID, stock symbol, country code), then it is panel ...

  8. First-difference estimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-Difference_Estimator

    The estimator requires data on a dependent variable, , and independent variables, , for a set of individual units =, …, and time periods =, …,. The estimator is obtained by running a pooled ordinary least squares (OLS) estimation for a regression of Δ y i t {\displaystyle \Delta y_{it}} on Δ x i t {\displaystyle \Delta x_{it}} .

  9. Multidimensional panel data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multidimensional_panel_data

    In econometrics, a multidimensional panel data is data of a phenomenon observed over three or more dimensions. This comes in contrast with panel data, observed over two dimensions (typically, time and cross-sections). An example is a data set containing forecasts of one or multiple macroeconomic variables produced by multiple individuals (the ...