[R] Positive log-likelihood in lme
Spencer Graves
spencer.graves at pdf.com
Wed Feb 16 23:19:41 CET 2005
The "likelihood" is the probability density function, which can be
greater than 1 for continuous distributions with a fairly narrow
spread. For discrete distributions, the density never exceeds 1, in
which case the log(likelihood) would always be negative(*).
hope this helps.
spencer graves
(*) If you are using measure-theoretic probability with some
non-standard measure, it might be possible to get a discrete probability
density greater than 1. One might want to use such as a class exercise,
but I can't think of a real world application for such.
Peter Alspach wrote:
>Kia ora
>
>I'm a using lme (from nlme package) with data similar to the Orthodont dataset and am getting positive log-likelihoods (>100). This seems usual and I wondered if someone could offer a possible explanation.
>
>I can supply a sample dataset if requested, but I feel almost certain that this question has been asked and answered recently. However, I can find no trace of it in the mail archives (although I have spent several hours reading lots of other interesting things :-)).
>
>Thanks .........
>
>Peter Alspach
>
>
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