3 research outputs found
Dealing with separation or near-to-separation in the model for multinomial response with application to childhood health seeking behavior data from a complex survey
Separation or monotone-likelihood can be observed in fitting process of a multinomial logistic model using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) when sample size is small and/or one of the outcome categories is rare and/or there is one or more influential covariates, resulting in infinite or biased estimate of at least one regression coefficient of the model. This study investigated empirically to identify the optimal data condition to define both ‘separation’ and ‘near-to-separation’ (partial separation) and explored their consequences in MLE and provided a solution by applying a penalized likelihood approach, which has been proposed in the literature, by adding a Jeffreys prior-based penalty term to the original likelihood function to remove the first-order bias in the MLEs of the multinomial logit model via equivalent Poisson regression. Furthermore, the penalized estimating equation (PMLE) is extended to a weighted estimating equation allowing for survey-weight for analyzing data from a complex survey. The simulation study suggests that the PMLE outperforms the MLE by providing smaller amount of bias and mean squared of error and better coverage. The methods are applied to analyze data on choice of health facility for treatment of childhood diseases.</p
Innovative Tokyo
This paper compares and contrasts Tokyo's innovation structure with the industrial districts model and the international hub model in the literature on urban and regional development. The Tokyo model embraces and yet transcends both industrial districts and international hub models. The paper details key elements making up the Tokyo model-organizational knowledge creation, integral and co-location systems of corporate R&D and new product development, test markets, industrial districts and clusters, participative consumer culture, continuous learning from abroad, local government policies, the national system of innovation, and the historical genesis of Tokyo in Japan's political economy. The paper finds that the Tokyo model of innovation will continue to evolve with the changing external environment, but fundamentally retains its main characteristics. The lessons from the Tokyo model is that openness, a diversified industrial base, the continuing development of new industries, and an emphasis on innovation, all contribute to the dynamism of a major metropolitan region.Labor Policies,Environmental Economics&Policies,Public Health Promotion,ICT Policy and Strategies,Agricultural Knowledge&Information Systems,ICT Policy and Strategies,Environmental Economics&Policies,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Agricultural Knowledge&Information Systems,Innovation
