%0 Journal Article %A K. Enders, Craig %A Hayes, Timothy %A Du, Han %D 2019 %T A Comparison of Multilevel Imputation Schemes for Random Coefficient Models: Fully Conditional Specification and Joint Model Imputation with Random Covariance Matrices %U https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_Comparison_of_Multilevel_Imputation_Schemes_for_Random_Coefficient_Models_Fully_Conditional_Specification_and_Joint_Model_Imputation_with_Random_Covariance_Matrices/7642493 %R 10.6084/m9.figshare.7642493.v1 %2 https://tandf.figshare.com/ndownloader/files/14199014 %K Missing data %K multiple imputation %K multilevel models %K joint model imputation %K fully conditional specification %X

Literature addressing missing data handling for random coefficient models is particularly scant, and the few studies to date have focused on the fully conditional specification framework and “reverse random coefficient” imputation. Although it has not received much attention in the literature, a joint modeling strategy that uses random within-cluster covariance matrices to preserve cluster-specific associations is a promising alternative for random coefficient analyses. This study is apparently the first to directly compare these procedures. Analytic results suggest that both imputation procedures can introduce bias-inducing incompatibilities with a random coefficient analysis model. Problems with fully conditional specification result from an incorrect distributional assumption, whereas joint imputation uses an underparameterized model that assumes uncorrelated intercepts and slopes. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that biases from these issues are tolerable if the missing data rate is 10% or lower and the sample is composed of at least 30 clusters with 15 observations per group. Furthermore, fully conditional specification tends to be superior with intraclass correlations that are typical of crosssectional data (e.g., ICC = .10), whereas the joint model is preferable with high values typical of longitudinal designs (e.g., ICC = .50).

%I Taylor & Francis