Greetings from Bogotá,
In my opinion, there are very nice books other than the most "classics" [i.e.
Dobson (2002) and McCullagh & Nelder (1989)].
You may find very useful and clear the work of Hardin & Hilbe (2001), in which
you can find the STATA support to the calculations and all that. As well, you
can find nice practical scopes on the following references: Olsson (2003),
Hutcheson & Sofroniou (1999) and Fox (2001), whose point of view is well
supported by R. Finally, you may find also useful the classic tutorial paper on
the use of GLM, written by Myers & Montgomery (1997) in JQT. Jeff Gill also
wrote a suitable approach [Gill (2000)] intended to be an "unified" one.
I hope this references will help you.
Best regards,
Prof. Arturo T. De Zan
Dept. of Industrial Engineering
Univesidad de los Andes
Bogotá - Colombia
http://www.uniandes.edu.co
Mensaje citado por Adaikalavan Ramasamy <[log in to unmask]>:
> Try
>
> An Introduction to Generalized Linear Models, Second Edition
> Annette Dobson
> ISBN : 1584881658
>
> Regards, Adai
>
>
> On Sun, 2006-01-01 at 16:54 -0500, Mark Coleman wrote:
> > Greetings,
> >
> > Can anyone suggest a good introductory text (or papers) to General
> > Linear Models? Also, I'd be interested in thoughts on how the major
> > software packages, e.g., SAS, R, etc., handle the basics of GLM, and
> > which ones offer the ability to extend the more commonly used models
> > to handle other sorts of distributions.
> >
> > Thanks and Happy New Year!
> >
> > Best regards,
> >
> > Mark
> >
>
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