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COUNT (version 1.3.4)

ml.nb1: NB1: maximum likelihood linear negative binomial regression

Description

ml.nb1 is a maximum likelihood function for estimating linear negative binomial (NB1) data. Output consists of a table of parameter estimates, standard errors, z-value, and confidence intervals.

Usage

ml.nb1(formula, data, offset=0, start=NULL, verbose=FALSE)

Value

The function returns a dataframe with the following components:

Estimate

ML estimate of the parameter

SE

Asymptotic estimate of the standard error of the estimate of the parameter

Z

The Z statistic of the asymptotic hypothesis test that the population value for the parameter is 0.

LCL

Lower 95% confidence interval for the parameter estimate.

UCL

Upper 95% confidence interval for the parameter estimate.

Arguments

formula

an object of class '"formula"': a symbolic description of the model to be fitted. The details of model specification are given under 'Details'.

data

a mandatory data frame containing the variables in the model.

offset

this can be used to specify an _a priori_ known component to be included in the linear predictor during fitting. The offset should be provided on the log scale.

start

an optional vector of starting values for the parameters.

verbose

a logical flag to indicate whether the fit information should be printed.

Author

Andrew Robinson, Universty of Melbourne, Australia, and Joseph M. Hilbe, Arizona State University, and Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

Details

ml.nb1 is used like glm.nb, but without saving ancillary statistics.

References

Hilbe, J.M. (2011), Negative Binomial Regression, second edition, Cambridge University Press.

See Also

glm.nb, ml.nbc, ml.nb2

Examples

Run this code
# Table 10.8, Hilbe. J.M. (2011), Negative Binomial Regression, 
#   2nd ed. Cambridge University Press (adapted)
data(medpar)
medpar$type <- factor(medpar$type)
med.nb1 <- ml.nb1(los ~ hmo + white + type, data = medpar)
med.nb1

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