How to Impute Interactions, Squares, and Other Transformed Variables

How to Impute Interactions, Squares, and Other Transformed Variables

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Bibliography: Von Hippel, P.T., 2009. How to Impute Interactions, Squares, and Other Transformed Variables. Sociological Methodology 39, 265–291. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9531.2009.01215.x

Authors:: Paul T. Von Hippel

Collections:: Methods

First-page:


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(08/05/2024, 21:39:55)

“Our recommendation is to transform, then impute—i.e., calculate the interactions or squares in the incomplete data and then impute these transformations like any other variable. The transform-then-impute method yields good regression estimates, even though the imputed values are often inconsistent with one another. It is tempting to try and “fix” the inconsistencies in the imputed values, but methods that do so lead to biased regression estimates. Such biased methods include the passive imputation strategy implemented by the popular ice command for Stata.” (Von Hippel, 2009, p. 265)