Hi all.
I have a count data model (in particular, a NB model), and I am asking stata to show me the IRR.
What I get, are some strange coefficients.
In particular, the constant is significant but equal to 4e-33 (in IRR). I was checking on the internet to understand if this was common, and what I found in the examples (http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/dae/nbreg.htm; http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/dae/poissonreg.htm) is that, when IRR are shown, the value of the contant is never shown (although the model was estimated with the constant).
Do you know why the value of the constant is not shown? It may be because there is no sense to compute the IRR of the constant? And, in this case, do I have to report its coefficient (instead of the IRR)?
The second point is that, in my model, I have some independent variables that are in log. Is this ok in count data model? I was thinking I could interprete the coefficients of these variables as the % change in the dependent variable for a 1% increase in the value of the independent variable. However, I get some crazy coefficients (like an elasticity of 48000). So I am wondering if maybe it is not possible to have log independent variables in count data models (or, if their coefficients have to be interpreted in a different way).
Thank you for any suggestion!
I have a count data model (in particular, a NB model), and I am asking stata to show me the IRR.
What I get, are some strange coefficients.
In particular, the constant is significant but equal to 4e-33 (in IRR). I was checking on the internet to understand if this was common, and what I found in the examples (http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/dae/nbreg.htm; http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/dae/poissonreg.htm) is that, when IRR are shown, the value of the contant is never shown (although the model was estimated with the constant).
Do you know why the value of the constant is not shown? It may be because there is no sense to compute the IRR of the constant? And, in this case, do I have to report its coefficient (instead of the IRR)?
The second point is that, in my model, I have some independent variables that are in log. Is this ok in count data model? I was thinking I could interprete the coefficients of these variables as the % change in the dependent variable for a 1% increase in the value of the independent variable. However, I get some crazy coefficients (like an elasticity of 48000). So I am wondering if maybe it is not possible to have log independent variables in count data models (or, if their coefficients have to be interpreted in a different way).
Thank you for any suggestion!
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