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Journal : Enthusiastic : International Journal of Applied Statistics and Data Science

Generalized Linear Mixed Model and Lasso Regularization for Statistical Downscaling Hayati, Ma'rufah -; Muslim, Agus
Enthusiastic : International Journal of Applied Statistics and Data Science Volume 1 Issue 1, April 2021
Publisher : Universitas Islam Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (1319.375 KB) | DOI: 10.20885/enthusiastic.vol1.iss1.art6

Abstract

Rainfall is one of the climatic elements in the tropics which is very influential in agriculture, especially in determining the growing season. Thus, proper rainfall modeling is needed to help determine the best time to start cultivating the soil. Rainfall modeling can be done using the Statistical Downscaling (SDS) method. SDS is a statistical model in the field of climatology to analyze the relationship between large-scale and small-scale climate data. This study uses response variables as a small-scale climate data in the form of rainfall and explanatory variables as a large-scale climate data of the General Circulation Model (GCM) output in the form of precipitation. However, the application of SDS modeling is known to cause several problems, including correlated and not stationary response variables, multi-dimensional explanatory variables, multicollinearity, and spatial correlation between grids. Modeling with some of these problems will cause violations of the assumptions of independence and multicollinearity. This research aims to model the rainfall in Indramayu Regency, West Java Province using a combined regression model between the Generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) and Least Absolute Selection and Shrinkage Operator (LASSO) regulation (L1). GLMM was used to deal with the problem of independence and Lasso Regulation (L1) was used to deal with multicollinearity problems or the number of explanatory variables that is greater than the response variable. Several models were formed to find the best model for modeling rainfall. This research used the GLMM-Lasso model with Normal spread compared to the GLMM model with Gamma response (Gamma-GLMM). The results showed that the RMSE and R-square GLMM-Lasso models were smaller than the Gamma-GLMM models. Thus, it can be concluded that GLMM-Lasso model can be used to model statistical downscaling and solve the previously mentioned constraints. Received February 10, 2021Revised March 29, 2021Accepted March 29, 2021
Log-Linear Analysis of the Association among Hematological Variables in Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever Cases Irfan, Miftahul; Hayati, Ma’rufah; Madonna, Nora; Dewi, Wardhani Utami
Enthusiastic : International Journal of Applied Statistics and Data Science Volume 5 Issue 2, October 2025
Publisher : Universitas Islam Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20885/enthusiastic.vol5.iss2.art6

Abstract

Health data are often analyzed in their continuous form through approaches such as linear, logistic, or survival models. In this study, hematological variables were dichotomized based on established clinical cut-offs to enable log-linear analysis of associations among categorical variables, acknowledging the potential loss of information from this transformation. A log-linear model was applied to evaluate independence, dependence, and interaction patterns among leukocyte, hemoglobin, and hematocrit categories in a dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) patient dataset. Previous analyses using survival models identified these variables as factors associated with recovery rates; however, these models did not capture their interaction structure. Log-linear analysis was therefore employed to examine these associations more comprehensively. The best-fitting model was identified as , which included two-factor interactions between leukocyte–hematocrit and hemoglobin–hematocrit. This model demonstrated a good fit (Pearson , , ), including a three-factor interaction resulted in a saturated model (= 0) and did not improve model performance. These findings highlight significant interaction patterns among hematological variables in DHF patients, providing a more detailed understanding of their joint associations.