Draga, R.
2008-Aug-01 14:18 UTC
[R] Major difference in the outcome between SPSS and R statistical programs
Dear collegues, I have used R statistical program, package 'lmer', several times already. I never encountered major differences in the outcome between SPSS and R. ...untill my last analyses. Would some know were the huge differences come from. Thanks in advance, Ronald In SPSS the Pearson correlation between variable 1 and variable 2 is 31% p<0.001. In SPSS binary logistic regression gives us an OR=4.9 (95% CI 2.7-9.0), p<0.001, n=338. OR lower upper gender 1,120 0,565 2,221 age 0,985 0,956 1,015 variable 2 4,937 2,698 9,032 In R multilevel logistic regression using statistical package 'lmer' gives us an OR=10.2 (95% CI 6.3-14), p=0.24, n=338, groups: group 1, 98; group 2 84. OR lower upper gender 2,295 -2,840 7,430 age 0,003 -70,047 70,054 variable 2 10,176 6,295 14,056 The crosstabs gives us: variable A Var B 0 1 0 156 108 1 17 57 Would somebody know how it is possible that in SPSS we get p<0.001 and in R we get p=0.24? [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Doran, Harold
2008-Aug-01 15:35 UTC
[R] Major difference in the outcome between SPSS and R statisticalprograms
The biggest problem is that SPSS cannot fit a generalized linear mixed model but lmer does. So, why would you expect the GLM in SPSS and the GLMM in lmer to match anyhow?> -----Original Message----- > From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org > [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of Draga, R. > Sent: Friday, August 01, 2008 10:19 AM > To: r-help at r-project.org > Subject: [R] Major difference in the outcome between SPSS and > R statisticalprograms > > Dear collegues, > > I have used R statistical program, package 'lmer', several > times already. > I never encountered major differences in the outcome between > SPSS and R. > ...untill my last analyses. > > Would some know were the huge differences come from. > > Thanks in advance, Ronald > > In SPSS the Pearson correlation between variable 1 and > variable 2 is 31% p<0.001. > > > > In SPSS binary logistic regression gives us an OR=4.9 (95% CI > 2.7-9.0), p<0.001, n=338. > > OR lower upper > > gender 1,120 0,565 2,221 > > age 0,985 0,956 1,015 > > variable 2 4,937 2,698 9,032 > > > > In R multilevel logistic regression using statistical package 'lmer' > gives us an OR=10.2 (95% CI 6.3-14), p=0.24, n=338, groups: > group 1, 98; group 2 84. > > OR lower upper > > gender 2,295 -2,840 7,430 > > age 0,003 -70,047 70,054 > > variable 2 10,176 6,295 14,056 > > > > The crosstabs gives us: > > variable A > > Var B 0 1 > > 0 156 108 > > 1 17 57 > > > > Would somebody know how it is possible that in SPSS we get > p<0.001 and in R we get p=0.24? > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >
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