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A Strategy for Designing Telescoping Models for Analyzing Multiway Contingency Tables Using Mixed Parameters

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  • Edward H. Ip
  • Yuchung J. Wang

Abstract

In the analysis of cross-classified data, sociologists often focus on building flexible models for the marginal distributions of a selected set of variables. One strategy for achieving flexible modeling is to design models for telescoping marginal distributions. As an illustration of telescoping distributions, consider a joint distribution of four crossclassifying variables: occupational attainment, education level, race, and gender. A set of telescoping distributions would be the univariate occupation distribution, the bivariate occupation by education, the trivariate occupation by education by race, and the entire joint distribution. A methodology that enables the telescoping modeling strategy is mixed parameterization, which has its roots in the statistics and sociology literatures. In this article, the authors develop a scheme of multilevel mixed parameterization that can be applied to a hierarchy of marginal distributions of reducing dimension. An example from the General Social Survey illustrates mixed parameters for telescoping models.

Suggested Citation

  • Edward H. Ip & Yuchung J. Wang, 2003. "A Strategy for Designing Telescoping Models for Analyzing Multiway Contingency Tables Using Mixed Parameters," Sociological Methods & Research, , vol. 31(3), pages 291-324, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:somere:v:31:y:2003:i:3:p:291-324
    DOI: 10.1177/0049124102239078
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