Good question, but I'm not aware of any studies.

Paul D. Allison, Professor
Department of Sociology
University of Pennsylvania
581 McNeil Building
3718 Locust Walk
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6299
610-715-5702
419-818-1220 (fax)
www.pauldallison.com<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.pauldallison.com_&d=CwIFAw&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=N9mDDDuK1isnKK-Q36bwNuZl066Rn4cNQtKxtVKMnWBnZ5yXlXHty3gF6wWXsdE6&m=WZhkIrvV_nPE4MPWJCbcERwh_uwCepoMW9A1CIlGono&s=jhCMas8sQAOyoeHxUbvqK4sCPETcmNiEkxGRSgzeBj8&e=
 >


________________________________
From: Impute -- Imputations in Data Analysis 
<[email protected]> on behalf of Paul von Hippel 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, September 9, 2016 11:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Typical number of imputations

Are there studies documenting how many imputations analysts typically use in 
MI? I know the recommendations, but I'm interested in what users are actually 
doing -- and whether users are using more imputations now than previously.

Best wishes,
Paul von Hippel
LBJ School of Public Affairs
Sid Richardson Hall 3.251
University of Texas, Austin
2315 Red River, Box Y
Austin, TX  78712

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