articlePolitical Science Research and MethodsNov 21, 2014Closed access

Should I Use Fixed or Random Effects?

Emory University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

Empirical analyses in social science frequently confront quantitative data that are clustered or grouped. To account for group-level variation and improve model fit, researchers will commonly specify either a fixed- or random-effects model. But current advice on which approach should be preferred, and under what conditions, remains vague and sometimes contradictory. This study performs a series of Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate the total error due to bias and variance in the inferences of each model, for typical sizes and types of datasets encountered in applied research. The results offer a typology of dataset characteristics to help researchers choose a preferred model.

Citation impact

750
total citations
FWCI
198.93
Percentile
100%
References
25
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Variance (accounting)
  • Typology
  • Monte Carlo method
  • Econometrics
  • Random effects model
  • Computer science
  • Statistics
  • Series (stratigraphy)
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