Summary
Contents
It is often necessary for social scientists to study differences in groups, such as gender or race differences in attitudes, buying behavior, or socioeconomic characteristics. When the researcher seeks to estimate group differences through the use of independent variables that are qualitative, dummy variables allow the researcher to represent information about group membership in quantitative terms without imposing unrealistic measurement assumptions on the categorical variables. Beginning with the simplest model, Hardy probes the use of dummy variable regression in increasingly complex specifications, exploring issues such as: interaction, heteroscedasticity, multiple comparisons and significance testing, the use of effects or contrast coding, testing for curvilinearity, and estimating a piecewise linear regression.
Introduction
Introduction
Regression analysis is one of the most flexible and widely used techniques of quantitative analysis. A typical regression model attempts to explain variation in a quantitative dependent variable, Yi, by mapping the relationship of Y to a specified set of independent variables as an additive, ...