Hello All,
I am analysing data from a functional MRI study in which we have multiple observations per subject, so I am using the xtmixed command to run a multilevel linear mixed-effects model. Unfortunately, I am having trouble interpreting the random effects in the Stata output table. Specifically, what exactly do sd(_cons) and sd(_Residual) signify?
This post from Chuck Huber (http://blog.stata.com/tag/xtmixed/) does an excellent job explaining mixed-effects models in general, but I still have some confusion. It seems as though Stata is merely partitioning the error term from a standard OLS regression into multiple pieces, such that the standard deviations of the random-effects parameters are the averages of the deviations from their respective means. Yet if this is true, then it is not clear to me why the fixed effects from "xtmixed" would be different than the fixed effects from "regress." The estimation process must be different somehow? It seems I am missing something basic.
Any help or guidance on this question would be much appreciated! Cheers,
Sam
I am analysing data from a functional MRI study in which we have multiple observations per subject, so I am using the xtmixed command to run a multilevel linear mixed-effects model. Unfortunately, I am having trouble interpreting the random effects in the Stata output table. Specifically, what exactly do sd(_cons) and sd(_Residual) signify?
This post from Chuck Huber (http://blog.stata.com/tag/xtmixed/) does an excellent job explaining mixed-effects models in general, but I still have some confusion. It seems as though Stata is merely partitioning the error term from a standard OLS regression into multiple pieces, such that the standard deviations of the random-effects parameters are the averages of the deviations from their respective means. Yet if this is true, then it is not clear to me why the fixed effects from "xtmixed" would be different than the fixed effects from "regress." The estimation process must be different somehow? It seems I am missing something basic.
Any help or guidance on this question would be much appreciated! Cheers,
Sam
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