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Comparar métodos

Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.

Regressão Lasso×Modelo de Efeitos Fixos para Dados em Painel×Regressão de Poisson e Binomial Negativa×
ÁreaAprendizado de máquinaEconometriaEconometria
FamíliaMachine learningRegression modelRegression model
Ano de origem199620141998
Autor originalTibshirani, R.Hsiao (textbook treatment); within transformation of panel dataCameron & Trivedi (textbook treatment); Hilbe (negative binomial)
TipoRegularized linear regression (L1 penalty)Panel data regressionGeneralized linear model for count data
Fonte seminalTibshirani, R. (1996). Regression Shrinkage and Selection via the Lasso. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B, 58(1), 267–288. DOI ↗Hsiao, C. (2014). Analysis of Panel Data (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press. DOI ↗Cameron, A. C. & Trivedi, P. K. (1998). Regression Analysis of Count Data. Cambridge University Press. DOI ↗
Outros nomesLASSO Regresyonu, lasso, L1-regularized regression, L1 regularizationfixed effects model, within estimator, panel fixed-effects regression, Panel Veri — Sabit Etkiler Modelicount regression, log-linear count model, negative binomial regression, Poisson / Negatif Binom Regresyon
Relacionados454
ResumoLasso regression, introduced by Robert Tibshirani in 1996, is a linear regression method that adds an L1 penalty to the loss so that it shrinks coefficients and performs variable selection at the same time, producing a sparse model. By driving some coefficients exactly to zero it keeps only the predictors that matter.The Panel Data Fixed Effects model estimates relationships from panel data (the same units observed over several time periods) while controlling for unit- and/or time-specific effects, supporting causal inference. It is developed as the within estimator in standard treatments such as Hsiao's Analysis of Panel Data (2014).Poisson regression is a generalized linear model for count outcomes — events tallied as non-negative integers such as hospital admissions, accidents, or article counts. It models the log of the expected count as a linear function of the predictors, and is developed in the standard count-data treatment of Cameron and Trivedi (1998); when the counts are over-dispersed, the closely related negative binomial model (Hilbe, 2011) is preferred.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Lasso Regression · Panel Fixed Effects · Poisson Regression. Recuperado em 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare