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Chapter 15, part D

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Chapter 15, part D Qualitative Independent Variables VI. Qualitative Independent Variables For most of our models we have restricted our independent variables to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15, part D


1
Chapter 15, part D
  • Qualitative Independent Variables

2
VI. Qualitative Independent Variables
  • For most of our models we have restricted our
    independent variables to quantitative data,
    values that can take any value in a range.
  • Past examples include Salary, G.P.A., of
    Customers, Repair Cost
  • Qualitative (dummy) variables are those that take
    two or more values (Gender, Political Party,
    Region of Country).

3
A. A Dummy Variable
  • The simplest of dummy variables is one in which
    there are only two possibilities for a
    qualitative variable. You arbitrarily assign a
    value of 1 to one possibility and a value of 0 to
    the other.
  • Examples X1 if Female X0 if Male
  • X1 if Union worker X0 if Nonunion
  • X1 if College Graduate X0 if not

4
B. Inclusion in a Regression
  • Problem 38 builds a model to relate Age (x1),
    Blood Pressure (x2) and Smoking (x3) to the Risk
    of Strokes (y).
  • Smoking is a dummy variable,
  • X3 1 if a smoker X30 if a non smoker.

5
Output
  • Overall, what do you make of these results?

6
C. Interpretation
  • The estimated coefficient on the Dummy for
    smoking is 8.74.
  • Since X31 for a smoker, this means the
    probability a patient has a stroke in the next 10
    years rises by 8.74 if theyre a smoker.
  • You cant do much about your age, but if you
    lower your blood pressure by 10 points, you lower
    the risk by 2.5. Hmmm, what should a person do?

7
D. Multi-level Dummy Variables
  • There are many wage/salary regression models that
    wish to examine differences in a wage variable by
    region of the country.
  • For example, we could divide the country into 4
    regions and assign a value of 1 to a worker from
    that region and 0 for all other regions.

8
Example
  • Suppose we have 3 workers in a set of data.
    Franklin is from the North, Elly May is from the
    South, and Chet is from the West. Our table of
    data might look like this

9
The Model
  • If you have 4 levels for the qualitative variable
    Region, you can only include 3 in the equation.
    Including all 4 makes it impossible for
    least-squares to minimize the sum of squared
    residuals.
  • The omission of one region creates a benchmark
    and allows you to compare all other regions to
    the one omitted.

10
Hypothetical Regression Results
  • Lets say that we leave out East and we find
    the following
  • Wage(Y) 100 50(North) - 25(South) - 10(West)
  • Remember, North1 only if a worker is from the
    North and all other regions South and West
    are 0 for that worker.

11
Interpretation
  • Franklin is from the North, so North1 and
    SouthWest0. His estimated wage is then
    10050150. Thus we could say that a worker
    from the North, all else held constant, would see
    a 50 increase in his/her wage

12
Continued...
  • Elly May is from the South, so South1 and
    NorthWest0. Her estimated wage is then
    100-2575.
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