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Original Articles

A comparison of the Hosmer–Lemeshow, Pigeon–Heyse, and Tsiatis goodness-of-fit tests for binary logistic regression under two grouping methods

, , , &
Pages 1871-1894 | Received 30 Sep 2014, Accepted 06 Feb 2015, Published online: 17 Nov 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Algebraic relationships between Hosmer–Lemeshow (HL), Pigeon–Heyse (J2), and Tsiatis (T) goodness-of-fit statistics for binary logistic regression models with continuous covariates were investigated, and their distributional properties and performances studied using simulations. Groups were formed under deciles-of-risk (DOR) and partition-covariate-space (PCS) methods. Under DOR, HL and T followed reported null distributions, while J2 did not. Under PCS, only T followed its reported null distribution, with HL and J2 dependent on model covariate number and partitioning. Generally, all had similar power. Of the three, T performed best, maintaining Type-I error rates and having a distribution invariant to covariate characteristics, number, and partitioning.

MATHEMATICAL SUBJECT CLASSIFICATION:

Acknowledgments

This research was funded by an Australian Postgraduate Award to the first author, as well as a grant from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC #490000) to the second author.

Conflict of interest

The authors have declared no conflict of interest.

Notes

1 The Stata command fracpoly performs a fractional polynomial regression, fitting fractional polynomials in the specified covariates to the dependent variable. (StataCorp, Citation2007).

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