- 2021
- Stata's growing interoperability: The case of PyStata & Jupyter Notebook
- Naqvi: Stata and GitHub Integration
- Customizable tables in Stata 17
- Creating dynamic HTML documents with Stata output
- 2020
- Enhancements to survival analysis suite
- Using Python within Stata
- Community corner: Graph Workflow
- Using margins to interpret choice model results
- Bayesian inference using multiple Markov chains
- 2019
- Customized forest plots for displaying meta-analysis results
- Importing data from SPSS and SAS
- Fun with frames
- Lasso
- Interpreting models for log-transformed outcomes (unbiased prediction: E(Y|X) = eXBeσ2/2 )
- User's corner: ftools and gtools
- 2018
- Scheming your way to your favorite graph style
- User's corner: Machine learning
- Nonparametric regression—Estimation, inference, and effects
- User's corner: A little help with Mata from the SSCC
- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models for policy analysis
- User's corner: ietoolkit for everyday tasks
- Interval-censored survival data—model fitting and beyond
- User's corner: Network analysis made easy
- 2017
- In the spotlight: Nonlinear multilevel mixed-effects models
- Cheatsheet: User's Corner: Quick references for your favorite commands
- What's new in Stata 15 (released on 2017-06-06, 15.1 released on 2017-12-20)
- Visualizing continuous-by-continuous interactions with margins and twoway contour
- 2016
- Storing long strings and entire files in Stata datasets
- Estimating, graphing, and interpreting interactions using margins
- eteffects and the challenges of making causal inferences
- Bayesian IRT–4PL model
- 2015
- Easy-to-interpret, flexible survival-time treatment effects, and Postestimation Selector
- Treatment effects, and irt
- Bayesian “random-effects” models, and What's New in Stata 14
- Finding and using results, constants, functions ... anything (Data > Other utilities > Hand calculator), and forecast for dynamic panel data and counterfactuals
- 2014
- 2013
- New univariate time-series features added in 13.1, and Adding your own methods to analyze power and sample size
- mlexp, and meglm, What's New in Stata 13
- 2012
- marginsplot and Fractals
- mgarch, and Receiver operating characteristic curves
- import excel and export excel
- 2011
- state-space models: Easier than they look
- SEM for economists (and others who think they don’t care), What's New in Stata 12
- The data editor
- 2010
- Competing-risks regression
- Margins of predicted outcomes
- Factor variables, and What's New in Stata 11.1
- Multiple imputation
- 2009: What's New in Stata 11.0
- 2008: Stata 10.1 Update
- 2007: What's New in Stata 10
- 2005: What's New in Stata 9
- 2002: What's New in Stata 8
- 2000: What's New in Stata 7
- 1985-1999: History of Stata
Disclaimer: This blog site is intended solely for sharing of information. Comments are warmly welcome, but I make no warranties regarding the quality, content, completeness, suitability, adequacy, sequence, or accuracy of the information.
Wednesday, March 08, 2017
Stata News: in the spotlight
Stata News: in the spotlight etc.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment