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Ben11
Level II

Compare polynomial regression lines

This may be basic but I'm struggling to find a way around this in JMP. Pardon me if this has been discussed previously on this forum. I essentially want to statistically compare regression lines. However, these are polynomial curves. All the options I have tried in JMP fits a linear curve by default which is not a good fit for the data.

Briefly, I want to perform a hypothesis test to assess whether there are differences among the categories within my dataset. I am able to do this using the 'Fit Model' dialog. But I am unable to the regression as 3rd order polynomials. Hence, JMP automatically applies a linear fit.

Is there a way to tell JMP to perform polynomial fitting in the "Fit Model" dialog. 

Your help is appreciated.

3 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

Accepted Solutions
Georg
Level VII

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

You can build this model as well in fit model platform (Macros --> Polynomial to degree ...),

using sex in By-role you can fit separate regression models, save them as formula and compare them as you need.

Georg_0-1658265240895.png

 

 

Georg

View solution in original post

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

If you want a formal statistical test to compare the curves, then you would add the categorical variable into the model. Using Georg's example, your model would be Height, Height^2, Height^3, Sex, Sex*Height, Sex*Height^2, Sex*Height^3.

 

The test of the parameter for Sex would tell you if there are differences in the intercepts. 

The test of the Sex*Height parameter would tell you if there are differences in the slopes of Height.

The test of Sex*Height^2 would tell you if there are differences in the quadratic parameter estimates.

The test of Sex*Height^3 would tell you if there are differences in the cubic parameters.

Dan Obermiller

View solution in original post

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

I think @Georg helped but didn't go far enough. That is to say, you need to add interaction terms for all the X terms. Here is the same example, but with an interaction term for all the :height terms:

 

diff poly.PNG

 

So this case concludes that there is no need for a unique intercept, first-order, or second-order term across sexes.

 

 

Note that these effect tests are appropriate for a difference in the parameter estimates across groups. They are not appropriate for equivalence.

View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5
Georg
Level VII

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

In platform fit y by x you can perform polynomial regression, and you can also show confidence region,

maybe this helps?

 

Georg_0-1658262153553.png

 

Georg
Ben11
Level II

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

Hello Georg,

 

Thanks but this doesn't help my situation. I have two categorial variables by which I need to compare the regressions. 

So the Fit Y by X doesn't help, unless there's some way around this that I don't know.

What I need to do is fit a polynomial curve through the Fit Model dialogue.

 

Georg
Level VII

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

You can build this model as well in fit model platform (Macros --> Polynomial to degree ...),

using sex in By-role you can fit separate regression models, save them as formula and compare them as you need.

Georg_0-1658265240895.png

 

 

Georg

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

If you want a formal statistical test to compare the curves, then you would add the categorical variable into the model. Using Georg's example, your model would be Height, Height^2, Height^3, Sex, Sex*Height, Sex*Height^2, Sex*Height^3.

 

The test of the parameter for Sex would tell you if there are differences in the intercepts. 

The test of the Sex*Height parameter would tell you if there are differences in the slopes of Height.

The test of Sex*Height^2 would tell you if there are differences in the quadratic parameter estimates.

The test of Sex*Height^3 would tell you if there are differences in the cubic parameters.

Dan Obermiller

Re: Compare polynomial regression lines

I think @Georg helped but didn't go far enough. That is to say, you need to add interaction terms for all the X terms. Here is the same example, but with an interaction term for all the :height terms:

 

diff poly.PNG

 

So this case concludes that there is no need for a unique intercept, first-order, or second-order term across sexes.

 

 

Note that these effect tests are appropriate for a difference in the parameter estimates across groups. They are not appropriate for equivalence.