Many surveys of respondents from multiple countries or subnational regions have now been fielded on multiple occasions. Social scientists are regularly using multilevel models to analyse the data generated by such surveys, investigating variation across both space and time. We show, however, that such models are usually specified erroneously. They typically omit one or more relevant random effects, thereby ignoring important clustering in the data, which leads to downward biases in the standard errors. These biases occur even if the fixed effects are specified correctly; if the fixed effects are incorrect, erroneous specification of the random effects worsens biases in the coefficients. We illustrate these problems using Monte Carlo simulat...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
This paper examined the amount bias in standard errors for fixed effects when the random part of a m...
Context effects, where a characteristic of an upper-level unit or cluster (e.g., a country) affects ...
Many surveys of respondents from multiple countries or subnational regions have now been fielded on ...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Res...
This paper assesses the options available to researchers analysing multilevel (including longitudina...
This article challenges Fixed Effects (FE) modelling as the ‘default’ for time-series-cross-sectiona...
Random effects models (that is, regressions with varying intercepts that are modeled with error) are...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
Mixed-effects multilevel models are often used to investigate cross-level interactions, a specific t...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
This paper examined the amount bias in standard errors for fixed effects when the random part of a m...
Context effects, where a characteristic of an upper-level unit or cluster (e.g., a country) affects ...
Many surveys of respondents from multiple countries or subnational regions have now been fielded on ...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Rese...
Entities such as individuals, teams, or organizations can vary systematically from one another. Res...
This paper assesses the options available to researchers analysing multilevel (including longitudina...
This article challenges Fixed Effects (FE) modelling as the ‘default’ for time-series-cross-sectiona...
Random effects models (that is, regressions with varying intercepts that are modeled with error) are...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
Mixed-effects multilevel models are often used to investigate cross-level interactions, a specific t...
Country effects on outcomes for individuals are often analysed using multilevel (hierarchical) model...
This paper examined the amount bias in standard errors for fixed effects when the random part of a m...
Context effects, where a characteristic of an upper-level unit or cluster (e.g., a country) affects ...