Back to the Future: Modeling Time Dependence in Binary Data

Author:

Carter David B.,Signorino Curtis S.

Abstract

Since Beck, Katz, and Tucker (1998), the standard method for modeling time dependence in binary data has been to incorporate time dummies or splined time in logistic regressions. Although we agree with the need for modeling time dependence, we demonstrate that time dummies can induce estimation problems due to separation. Splines do not suffer from these problems. However, the complexity of splines has led substantive researchers (1) to use knot values that may be inappropriate for their data and (2) to ignore any substantive discussion concerning temporal dependence. We propose a relatively simple alternative: including t, t2, and t3 in the regression. This cubic polynomial approximation is trivial to implement—and, therefore, interpret—and it avoids problems such as quasi-complete separation. Monte Carlo analysis demonstrates that, for the types of hazards one often sees in substantive research, the polynomial approximation always outperforms time dummies and generally performs as well as splines or even more flexible autosmoothing procedures. Due to its simplicity, this method also accommodates nonproportional hazards in a straightforward way. We reanalyze Crowley and Skocpol (2001) using nonproportional hazards and find new empirical support for the historical-institutionalist perspective.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference53 articles.

1. Territory, Contiguity, and International Conflict: Assessing a New Joint Explanation

2. Taking Time Seriously: Time-Series-Cross-Section Analysis with a Binary Dependent Variable

3. A Nation of Organizers: The Institutional Origins of Civic Voluntarism in the United States

4. Semiparametric Regression

5. We compiled this list by locating all published articles that cited BKT in the Social Sciences Citation Index as of July 2006. We then went through all the articles to determine whether they implemented either splines or time dummies and whether they interpreted the hazard.

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