Best advice I can give: Find a local statistical expert to work with.
You appear to be asking for help understanding statistical methodology
when you do not have the necessary background to do so.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"Data is not information. Information is not knowledge. And knowledge
is certainly not wisdom."
-- Clifford Stoll
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 5:41 AM, Iker Vaquero Alba <karraspito at
yahoo.es> wrote:>
> Hello everyone,
> I am going to ask this certainly tricky question here not (yet) with the
intention of getting a definitive answer, as I need to deepen my questions much
more, but just to have an approximate idea of which direction taking next.
> I have a dataset where the potential response variables are categorical
multinomial (ordered, I think): several people were asked to give a value from 1
to 5 to several attributes in a potential partner, both for a short term
commitment or for a longer relationship. The age, religion, sexual orientation,
sexual identity (gender), self-perceived sexual attractivess and minimum
attractiveness demanded in a potential partner (this ones also with values 1 to
5) were recorded for each participant. The idea is using the values given to
attributes in potential partners as the response variable, and see to what
extent these are influenced by the person's age, gender, religion and so on.
> The problem is that all my variables are factors, I have no numeric
ones. Also, as the values given to the same attributes for a short term
commitment of for a longer relationship are expected to be correlated, I was
considering using multiple response variables, which adds even more difficulty
to the model.
> I have been reading about MCMCglmm, the course notes, which are not easy
to understand. In any case, at some point I have read that if I don't want
to fit random effects (as I think it's my case), I'd better use the pscl
package instead.
>
> Can you give me any advice at this point? Should I try and use pscl, or
is it better to try with MCMCglmm given the difficulty of the model? Any little
help will be highly appreciated.
>
> Thank you very much
> Iker.
>
> __________________________________________________________________
>
> Dr. Iker Vaquero-Alba
> Visiting Postdoctoral Research Associate
> Laboratory of Evolutionary Ecology of Adaptations
> School of Life Sciences
> Joseph Banks Laboratories
> University of Lincoln Brayford Campus, Lincoln
> LN6 7DL
> United Kingdom
>
> https://eric.exeter.ac.uk/repository/handle/10036/3381
>
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
> 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.