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Autor/inn/enMcNeish, Daniel; Peña, Armando; Vander Wyst, Kiley B.; Ayers, Stephanie L.; Olson, Micha L.; Shaibi, Gabriel Q.
TitelFacilitating Growth Mixture Model Convergence in Preventive Interventions
Quelle(2021), (30 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext (1); PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei (2) Verfügbarkeit 
ZusatzinformationWeitere Informationen
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
SchlagwörterPrevention; Intervention; Growth Models; Program Effectiveness; Research Methodology; Multivariate Analysis; Sample Size; Life Style; Diabetes; At Risk Persons; Hispanic Americans; Adolescents; Obesity; Health Promotion
AbstractGrowth mixture models (GMMs) are applied to intervention studies with repeated measures to explore heterogeneity in the intervention effect. However, traditional GMMs are known to be difficult to estimate, especially at sample sizes common in single-center interventions. Common strategies to coerce GMMs to converge involve post-hoc adjustments to the model, particularly constraining covariance parameters to equality across classes. Methodological studies have shown that although convergence is improved with post-hoc adjustments, they embed additional tenuous assumptions into the model that can adversely impact key aspects of the model such as number of classes extracted and the estimated growth trajectories in each class. To facilitate convergence without post-hoc adjustments, this paper reviews the recent literature on covariance pattern mixture models, which approach GMMs from a marginal modeling tradition rather than the random effect modeling tradition used by traditional GMMs. We discuss how the marginal modeling tradition can avoid complexities in estimation encountered by GMMs that feature random effects and we use data from a lifestyle intervention for increasing insulin sensitivity (a risk factor for type 2 diabetes) among 90 Latino adolescents with obesity to demonstrate our point. Specifically, GMMs featuring random effects -- even with post-hoc adjustments -- fail to converge due to estimation errors whereas covariance pattern mixture models following the marginal model tradition encounter no issues with estimation while maintaining the ability to answer all the research questions. [This paper will be published in "Prevention Science."] (As Provided).
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2024/1/01
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