OUTPUT
<OUT=SAS-data-set> keyword=names <…keyword=names> <option> ;
The OUTPUT statement creates a new SAS data set that saves diagnostic measures calculated after fitting the model. At least
one specification of the form keyword=names is required.
All the variables in the original data set are included in the new data set, along with variables created in the OUTPUT statement.
These new variables contain the values of a variety of diagnostic measures that are calculated for each observation in the
data set. If you want to create a SAS data set in a permanent library, you must specify a two-level name. For more information
about permanent libraries and SAS data sets, see
SAS Language Reference: Concepts.
Details on the specifications in the OUTPUT statement follow.
-
keyword=names
-
specifies the statistics to include in the output data set and provides names to the new variables that contain the statistics.
Specify a keyword for each desired statistic (see the following list of keywords), an equal sign, and the variable or variables
to contain the statistic.
In the output data set, the first variable listed after a keyword in the OUTPUT statement contains that statistic for the
first dependent variable listed in the MODEL statement; the second variable contains the statistic for the second dependent variable in the MODEL statement, and so on. The list of variables following the equal sign can be shorter than the list of dependent variables
in the MODEL statement. In this case, the procedure creates the new names in order of the dependent variables in the MODEL statement. See the section Examples.
The keywords allowed and the statistics they represent are as follows:
-
COOKD
-
Cook’s D influence statistic
-
COVRATIO
-
standard influence of observation on covariance of parameter estimates
-
DFFITS
-
standard influence of observation on predicted value
-
H
-
leverage,
-
LCL
-
lower bound of a 100(1 - p)% confidence interval for an individual prediction. The p-level is equal to the value of the ALPHA= option in the OUTPUT statement or, if this option is not specified, to the ALPHA= option in the PROC GLM statement. If neither of these options is set, then p = 0.05 by default, resulting in the lower bound for a 95% confidence interval. The interval also depends on the variance
of the error, as well as the variance of the parameter estimates. For the corresponding upper bound, see the UCL keyword.
-
LCLM
-
lower bound of a 100(1 - p)% confidence interval for the expected value (mean) of the predicted value. The p-level is equal to the value of the ALPHA= option in the OUTPUT statement or, if this option is not specified, to the ALPHA= option in the PROC GLM statement. If neither of these options is set, then p = 0.05 by default, resulting in the lower bound for a 95% confidence interval. For the corresponding upper bound, see the
UCLM keyword.
-
PREDICTED | P
-
predicted values
-
PRESS
-
residual for the ith observation that results from dropping it and predicting it on the basis of all other observations. This is the residual
divided by , where is the leverage, defined previously.
-
RESIDUAL | R
-
residuals, calculated as ACTUAL – PREDICTED
-
RSTUDENT
-
a studentized residual with the current observation deleted
-
STDI
-
standard error of the individual predicted value
-
STDP
-
standard error of the mean predicted value
-
STDR
-
standard error of the residual
-
STUDENT
-
studentized residuals, the residual divided by its standard error
-
UCL
-
upper bound of a 100(1 - p)% confidence interval for an individual prediction. The p-level is equal to the value of the ALPHA= option in the OUTPUT statement or, if this option is not specified, to the ALPHA= option in the PROC GLM statement. If neither of these options is set, then p = 0.05 by default, resulting in the upper bound for a 95% confidence interval. The interval also depends on the variance
of the error, as well as the variance of the parameter estimates. For the corresponding lower bound, see the LCL keyword.
-
UCLM
-
upper bound of a 100(1 - p)% confidence interval for the expected value (mean) of the predicted value. The p-level is equal to the value of the ALPHA= option in the OUTPUT statement or, if this option is not specified, to the ALPHA= option in the PROC GLM statement. If neither of these options is set, then p = 0.05 by default, resulting in the upper bound for a 95% confidence interval. For the corresponding lower bound, see the
LCLM keyword.
-
OUT=SAS-data-set
-
gives the name of the new data set. By default, the procedure uses the DATAn
convention to name the new data set.
The following option is available in the OUTPUT statement and is specified after a slash (/):
-
ALPHA=p
-
specifies the level of significance p for % confidence intervals. By default, p is equal to the value of the ALPHA= option in the PROC GLM statement or 0.05 if that option is not specified. You can use values between 0 and 1.
See Chapter 4: Introduction to Regression Procedures, and the section Influence Statistics in Chapter 79: The REG Procedure, for details on the calculation of these statistics.
The following statements show the syntax for creating an output data set with a single dependent variable.
proc glm;
class a b;
model y=a b a*b;
output out=new p=yhat r=resid stdr=eresid;
run;
These statements create an output data set named new
. In addition to all the variables from the original data set, new
contains the variable yhat
, with values that are predicted values of the dependent variable y
; the variable resid
, with values that are the residual values of y
; and the variable eresid
, with values that are the standard errors of the residuals.
The following statements show a situation with five dependent variables.
proc glm;
by group;
class a;
model y1-y5=a x(a);
output out=pout predicted=py1-py5;
run;
The data set pout
contains five new variables, py1
through py5
. The values of py1
are the predicted values of y1
; the values of py2
are the predicted values of y2
; and so on.
For more information about the data set produced by the OUTPUT statement, see the section Output Data Sets.