In breach of homework policy
Hi,
I don't know how you got to be working on this problem, but there is a full discussion of it on this page:
In this module, students will become familiar with logistic (Binomial) regression for data that either consists of 1's and 0's (yes and no), or fractions that represent the number of successes out of n trials. We focus on the R glm() method for...
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Grtz,
PJ
Hi, Ryan
Logistic regression is a mind bender in many ways, as I've found during the course of this year.
Usually, the problem is using ordinary least square regression to model a binary outcome. Here, it looks like you are using logistic/binary regression to model a continuous outcome.
Did I miss something? What the rationale for not modeling this with lm
?
system
Closed
August 26, 2019, 1:24pm
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