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Analysis of clustered data in community psychology: With an example from a worksite smoking cessation project
Authors:Donald Hedeker  Susan D McMahon  Leonard A Jason  Doreen Salina
Institution:(1) DePaul University, Chicago, USA;(2) Northwestern University, Evanstan, USA;(3) Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics (M/C 922), School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago, 2121 West Taylor Street, Room 510, 60612-7260 Chicago, Illinois
Abstract:Although it is common in community psychology research to have data at both the community, or cluster, and individual level, the analysis of such clustered data often presents difficulties for many researchers. Since the individuals within the cluster cannot be assumed to be independent, the use of many traditional statistical techniques that assumes independence of observations is problematic. Further, there is often interest in assessing the degree of dependence in the data resulting from the clustering of individuals within communities. In this paper, a random-effects regression model is described for analysis of clustered data. Unlike ordinary regression analysis of clustered data, random-effects regression models do not assume that each observation is independent, but do assume data within clusters are dependent to some degree. The degree of this dependency is estimated along with estimates of the usual model parameters, thus adjusting these effects for the dependency resulting from the clustering of the data. Models are described for both continuous and dichotomous outcome variables, and available statistical software for these models is discussed. An analysis of a data set where individuals are clustered within firms is used to illustrate fetatures of random-effects regression analysis, relative to both individual-level analysis which ignores the clustering of the data, and cluster-level analysis which aggregates the individual data. Preparation of this article was supported by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant R18 HL42987-01A1, National Institutes of Mental Health Grant MH44826-01A2, and University of Illinois at Chicago Prevention Research Center Developmental Project CDC Grant R48/CCR505025.
Keywords:intraclass correlation  unit of analysis  nested design  correlated data  random-effects model
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