It is common, and easy, to think of these threads as a dialog between somebody asking a question and another person answering it. But that is not the case. There are other audiences: people who read along to learn without posting anything themselves, and people who visit the forum looking for specific advice and searching for particular threads. For both of these audiences it is important to have the content match the titles of the threads. Even though it is part of your same project, the questions raised are new. So I suggest you re-post this question in a new thread, with a title that indicates what the question is about.
Also, when you start a message with greeting to a particular responder, it may discourage others from responding, even though they might be able to help out. In this case, you've posed a question I know nothing about. I don't do any time-series analysis in my work. So you need a response from somebody else, knowledgeable in this area. (There are many such on the Forum.) So, when you do repost this in a new thread, don't address it to anyone in particular, that way you'll get the widest possible range of people interested in it.
Also, when you start a message with greeting to a particular responder, it may discourage others from responding, even though they might be able to help out. In this case, you've posed a question I know nothing about. I don't do any time-series analysis in my work. So you need a response from somebody else, knowledgeable in this area. (There are many such on the Forum.) So, when you do repost this in a new thread, don't address it to anyone in particular, that way you'll get the widest possible range of people interested in it.
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