[R] mixtures as outcome variables

2005-03-22 Thread Jason W. Martinez
Dear R-users, I have an outcome variable and I'm unsure about how to treat it. Any advice? I have spending data for each county in the state of California (N=58). Each county has been allocated money to spend on any one of the following four categories: A, B, C, and D. Each county may spend the

Re: [R] mixtures as outcome variables

2005-03-23 Thread Kjetil Brinchmann Halvorsen
Jason W. Martinez wrote: Dear R-users, I have an outcome variable and I'm unsure about how to treat it. Any advice? I have spending data for each county in the state of California (N=58). Each county has been allocated money to spend on any one of the following four categories: A, B, C, and D. Each

Re: [R] mixtures as outcome variables

2005-03-23 Thread Greg Snow
>> >>> "Jason W. Martinez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 03/22/05 04:11PM >>> >> Dear R-users, >> >> I have an outcome variable and I'm unsure about how to treat it. Any >> advice? Below are a couple of ideas/suggestions of things to think about >> >> I have spending data for each county in the st

Re: [R] mixtures as outcome variables

2005-03-24 Thread Kjetil Brinchmann Halvorsen
Kjetil Brinchmann Halvorsen wrote: Jason W. Martinez wrote: Dear R-users, I have an outcome variable and I'm unsure about how to treat it. Any advice? If you only concentrate on the relative proportions, this are called compositional data. I f your data are in mydata (n x 4), you obtain compositio

Re: [R] mixtures as outcome variables

2005-03-25 Thread James Reilly
: Kjetil Brinchmann Halvorsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: [R] mixtures as outcome variables Cc: r-help@stat.math.ethz.ch, "Jason W. Martinez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Kjetil Brinchmann Halvorsen wrote: Jason W. Martinez wrote: Dear R-users, I have an outcome variable and I'