Wald-based and likelihood-ratio-based confidence intervals are available in the MODEL procedure for computing a confidence
interval on an estimated parameter. A confidence interval on a parameter can be constructed by inverting a Wald-based or a likelihood-ratio-based test.
The approximate % Wald confidence interval for a parameter
is
![]() |
where is the
th percentile of the standard normal distribution,
is the maximum likelihood estimate of
, and
is the standard error estimate of
.
A likelihood-ratio-based confidence interval is derived from the distribution of the generalized likelihood ratio test. The approximate
confidence interval for a parameter
is
![]() |
where is the
quantile of the
with one degree of freedom, and
is the log likelihood as a function of one parameter. The endpoints of a confidence interval are the zeros of the function
. Computing a likelihood-ratio-based confidence interval is an iterative process. This process must be performed twice for
each parameter, so the computational cost is considerable. Using a modified form of the algorithm recommended by Venzon and
Moolgavkar (1988), you can determine that the cost of each endpoint computation is approximately the cost of estimating the
original system.
To request confidence intervals on estimated parameters, specify the PRL= option in the FIT statement. By default, the PRL option produces 95% likelihood ratio confidence limits. The coverage of the confidence interval is controlled by the ALPHA= option in the FIT statement.
The following is an example of the use of the confidence interval options.
data exp; do time = 1 to 20; y = 35 * exp( 0.01 * time ) + 5*rannor( 123 ); output; end; run; proc model data=exp; parm zo 35 b; dert.z = b * z; y=z; fit y init=(z=zo) / prl=both; test zo = 40.475437 ,/ lr; run;
The output from the requested confidence intervals and the TEST statement are shown in Figure 19.58
Figure 19.58: Confidence Interval Estimation
Nonlinear OLS Parameter Estimates | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Parameter | Estimate | Approx Std Err | t Value | Approx Pr > |t| |
zo | 36.58933 | 1.9471 | 18.79 | <.0001 |
b | 0.006497 | 0.00464 | 1.40 | 0.1780 |
Test Results | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Test | Type | Statistic | Pr > ChiSq | Label |
Test0 | L.R. | 3.81 | 0.0509 | zo = 40.475437 |
Parameter Wald 95% Confidence Intervals |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Parameter | Value | Lower | Upper |
zo | 36.5893 | 32.7730 | 40.4056 |
b | 0.00650 | -0.00259 | 0.0156 |
Parameter Likelihood Ratio 95% Confidence Intervals |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Parameter | Value | Lower | Upper |
zo | 36.5893 | 32.8381 | 40.4921 |
b | 0.00650 | -0.00264 | 0.0157 |
In this example the parameter value used in the likelihood ratio test, , is close to the upper bound computed for the likelihood ratio confidence interval,
. This coincidence is not germane to the analysis however, since the likelihood ratio test is a test of the null hypothesis
and the confidence interval can be viewed as a test of the null hypothesis
.