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AXR
Calcite | Level 5 AXR
Calcite | Level 5

Hi,

 

I'm running a logistic regression in proc genmod for proportion data. I am regressing the share of white students in a school on whether the school is in a city or a suburb. How do I calculate the marginal effects for the city variable? I can't use the margins macro because I'm using the events/trial syntax for proportion data. 

proc genmod data=dat;
class city;
model n_white/total_students = city/dist=bin link=logit;
run;

n_white = number of white students

total_students = number of students in the school

city = indicator for whether a school is in a city or suburb

9 REPLIES 9
PaigeMiller
Diamond | Level 26

I'm not sure what you mean by "marginal" in this situation where you have one X variable. Could you explain further?

--
Paige Miller
AXR
Calcite | Level 5 AXR
Calcite | Level 5

Hi,

 

There are a number of other covariates also in the model, sorry! For example, income inequality ("gini", continuous), charter school ("charter", categorical), urbanicity ("urban", categorical), among many others.

 

The updated code could look like

 

proc genmod data=dat;
class city;
model n_white/total_students = city gini charter urban/dist=bin link=logit;
run;

 

 

Ksharp
Super User

Did you check ESTIMATE and SLICE statement.

Or you could use EFFECTPLOT to visualize this marginal effect.

StatDave
SAS Super FREQ

You can use the Margins macro... just modify your aggregated (events/trials) data to create one observation with count for events and one observation with count for nonevents. Then, as mentioned in the Limitations section of the macro documentation, use the FREQ= option in the macro. For example:

 

data drug;
   input drug$ x r n @@;
   y=1; f=r; output;
   y=0; f=n-r; output;
   datalines;
A  .1   1  10   A  .23  2  12   A  .67  1   9
B  .2   3  13   B  .3   4  15   B  .45  5  16   B  .78  5  13
C  .04  0  10   C  .15  0  11   C  .56  1  12   C  .7   2  12
D  .34  5  10   D  .6   5   9   D  .7   8  10
E  .2  12  20   E  .34 15  20   E  .56 13  15   E  .8  17  20
;
%Margins(data     = drug,
         class    = drug,
         response = y,
         roptions = event='1',
         freq     = f,
         dist     = binomial,
         model    = drug x,
         margins  = drug, 
         options  = diff cl )

 

AXR
Calcite | Level 5 AXR
Calcite | Level 5

Interesting, I tried your method but got the following error:

 

   ERROR: A cluster has been detected with the frequency counts specified
          by the FREQ statement unequal within the cluster. The frequency counts
          must be equal within clusters.

 

StatDave
SAS Super FREQ

That sounds like a message you could get if you use the GEESUBJECT= option. It would help if you showed your DATA step code and your macro call.

AXR
Calcite | Level 5 AXR
Calcite | Level 5

Hi,

 

My data are 18,000+ observations, should I attach the csv here? I use the geesubject option because schools are nested within cities and suburbs.

StatDave
SAS Super FREQ

In that case, you will need to fully expand your aggregated data so that one observation represents a single individual and not use the FREQ= option. For example:

data drug;
   input drug$ x r n @@;
   do i=1 to r; y=1; output; end;
   do i=1 to n-r; y=0; output; end;
   datalines;
A  .1   1  10   A  .23  2  12   A  .67  1   9
B  .2   3  13   B  .3   4  15   B  .45  5  16   B  .78  5  13
C  .04  0  10   C  .15  0  11   C  .56  1  12   C  .7   2  12
D  .34  5  10   D  .6   5   9   D  .7   8  10
E  .2  12  20   E  .34 15  20   E  .56 13  15   E  .8  17  20
;
AXR
Calcite | Level 5 AXR
Calcite | Level 5

I am hesitant to do it this way because my unit of analysis is the aggregated data (schools) not the individual student data. Is there a way to calculate the average marginal effect without using the margins macro for proc genmod?

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