Applied Econometrics with R / Christian Kleiber, Achim Zeileis
Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Springer, c2008.Description: x, 221 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:- 9780387773162
- 0387773169
- 519.50285/5133 22
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
REGULAR | University of Wollongong in Dubai Main Collection | 519.502855133 KL AP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | T0011124 |
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519.50285 SI PR Practical business statistics with Statpad / | 519.50285 SI PR Practical business statistics / | 519.502855 PA PR SPSS for Windows step by step : | 519.502855133 KL AP Applied Econometrics with R / | 519.5028553 BL IN Introduction to structural equation modeling using IBM SPSS statistics and EQS | 519.5028553 GO ST Statistics with JMP : | 519.5028553 PR ST Student study guide with SPSS workbook for statistics for the behavioral sciences / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
R is a language and environment for data analysis and graphics. It may be considered an implementation of S, an award-winning language initially - veloped at Bell Laboratories since the late 1970s. The R project was initiated by Robert Gentleman and Ross Ihaka at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, in the early 1990s, and has been developed by an international team since mid-1997. Historically, econometricians have favored other computing environments, some of which have fallen by the wayside, and also a variety of packages with canned routines. We believe that R has great potential in econometrics, both for research and for teaching. There are at least three reasons for this: (1) R is mostly platform independent and runs on Microsoft Windows, the Mac family of operating systems, and various ?avors of Unix/Linux, and also on some more exotic platforms. (2) R is free software that can be downloaded and installed at no cost from a family of mirror sites around the globe, the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN); hence students can easily install it on their own machines. (3) R is open-source software, so that the full source code is available and can be inspected to understand what it really does, learn from it, and modify and extend it. We also like to think that platform independence and the open-source philosophy make R an ideal environment for reproducible econometric research.
This is the first book on applied econometrics using the R system for statistical computing and graphics. It presents hands-on examples for a wide range of econometric models, from classical linear regression models for cross-section, time series or panel data and the common non-linear models of microeconometrics such as logit, probit and tobit models, to recent semiparametric extensions. In addition, it provides a chapter on programming, including simulations, optimization, and an introduction to R tools enabling reproducible econometric
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