BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
🔒 This topic is solved and locked. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
OscarUvalle
Obsidian | Level 7

 

Hi, I'm looking for a fancy way to solve my problem. Even though the code is doing what I need I am not happy with it.

What I need is to take values from two OUTPUTs obtained by PROC LOGISTIC and PROC MEANS. 

How can I assign the mean value obtained from PROC MEANS to a new variable? In this case, I have two means, one where the class is 1 and the other when the class is 0. Therefore, I need to create a variable called mean_y_1 and  mean_y_0. I assigned those values by hand, how can I do using functions?.  Check the code below.

Thank you.

 

DATA ORIGINAL;
	INPUT ID Y CLASS;
   	CARDS;
1 12000 1
2 0 0
3 0.6 0 
4 0.7 1
5 19 0
;
RUN;

PROC LOGISTIC DATA = ORIGINAL PLOT = NONE OUTEST = LOGIT_ESTIMATESS;
	MODEL  CLASS(EVENT = '1')= Y /; RUN;

PROC MEANS DATA = ORIGINAL n MEAN STD MAXDEC = 4;
  CLASS CLASS;  VAR ID; OUTPUT OUT= ORIGINAL_MEANS MEAN= MEAN_Y; RUN;

/* TAKING VALUES FROM LOGIT_ESTIMATES AND ORIGINAL_MEANS. BOTH TABLES ARE THE OUTPUT OF 
PROC LOGISTIC AND PROC MEANS */ DATA ORIGINAL_ANALYSIS; DROP _FREQ_ _TYPE_ ; SET LOGIT_ESTIMATESS; /* ASSIGNING THE MEAN VALUE BY CLASS */ MEAN_Y_1 = 3.3333; MEAN_Y_0 = 2.5000; /* WHEN CLASS = 1 */ STEP1_1 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_1) ; /* WHEN CLASS = 0 */ STEP1_0 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_0) ; FORMAT STEP1_1 STEP1_0 COMMA32.31; LABEL STEP1_1 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1'; LABEL STEP1_0 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1'; RUN; PROC PRINT DATA = ORIGINAL_ANALYSIS LABEL; FORMAT STEP1_1 STEP1_0 COMMA10.4 ;VAR STEP1_1 STEP1_0 ; RUN;

 

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
novinosrin
Tourmaline | Level 20

a fix

 


PROC MEANS DATA = ORIGINAL n MEAN STD MAXDEC = 4 nway;
  CLASS CLASS;  VAR ID; OUTPUT OUT= ORIGINAL_MEANS MEAN= MEAN_Y; RUN;

DATA ORIGINAL_ANALYSIS;  SET LOGIT_ESTIMATESS;
if _n_=1 then do; 
set ORIGINAL_MEANS(firstobs=1 keep=mean_y rename=(mean_y=  MEAN_Y_0));
set ORIGINAL_MEANS(firstobs=2 keep=mean_y rename=(mean_y=  MEAN_Y_1));
end;
/* ASSIGNING THE MEAN VALUE BY CLASS */
/*	MEAN_Y_1 = 3.3333;*/
/* 	MEAN_Y_0 = 2.5000;*/

/* WHEN CLASS = 1 */
 STEP1_1 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_1) ;  
/* WHEN CLASS = 0 */
 STEP1_0 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_0) ;  

 FORMAT STEP1_1  STEP1_0 COMMA32.31;
 LABEL STEP1_1 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1';
 LABEL STEP1_0 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1';
RUN;

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
novinosrin
Tourmaline | Level 20

a fix

 


PROC MEANS DATA = ORIGINAL n MEAN STD MAXDEC = 4 nway;
  CLASS CLASS;  VAR ID; OUTPUT OUT= ORIGINAL_MEANS MEAN= MEAN_Y; RUN;

DATA ORIGINAL_ANALYSIS;  SET LOGIT_ESTIMATESS;
if _n_=1 then do; 
set ORIGINAL_MEANS(firstobs=1 keep=mean_y rename=(mean_y=  MEAN_Y_0));
set ORIGINAL_MEANS(firstobs=2 keep=mean_y rename=(mean_y=  MEAN_Y_1));
end;
/* ASSIGNING THE MEAN VALUE BY CLASS */
/*	MEAN_Y_1 = 3.3333;*/
/* 	MEAN_Y_0 = 2.5000;*/

/* WHEN CLASS = 1 */
 STEP1_1 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_1) ;  
/* WHEN CLASS = 0 */
 STEP1_0 = INTERCEPT + (Y * MEAN_Y_0) ;  

 FORMAT STEP1_1  STEP1_0 COMMA32.31;
 LABEL STEP1_1 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1';
 LABEL STEP1_0 = 'AVERAGE METHOD PROBABILITY OF CLASS = 1';
RUN;
OscarUvalle
Obsidian | Level 7

Thanks that's what I was looking.

Works perfectly.

Cheers

sas-innovate-2024.png

Available on demand!

Missed SAS Innovate Las Vegas? Watch all the action for free! View the keynotes, general sessions and 22 breakouts on demand.

 

Register now!

What is Bayesian Analysis?

Learn the difference between classical and Bayesian statistical approaches and see a few PROC examples to perform Bayesian analysis in this video.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

Click image to register for webinarClick image to register for webinar

Classroom Training Available!

Select SAS Training centers are offering in-person courses. View upcoming courses for:

View all other training opportunities.

Discussion stats
  • 2 replies
  • 817 views
  • 3 likes
  • 2 in conversation