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I admit to being somewhat confused by what you say
below. You say
you have a model but don't specify what analysis you're
doing. At first
glance, one might think that you are doing a multivariate
regression of
Y and Z on X (for a Stats example of this,
see:
But you say that X, Y, and Z each has three indicator
variables which
(a) suggests that you have a measurement
model of each construct and
(b) you are doing a structural equation
(SEM) analysis for the latent variable
X, Y, and Z.
If you are doing a SEM analysis, which software package are
you using
and what type of analysis are you doing (e.g., Maximum
likelihood, etc.)?
A simplistic answer to your question is that the errors of Y
are correlated
with the errors of Z and this causes your model to fail under
the assumption
of independent errors. Obviously, when run as seperate
models, the
correlated error are not apparent because there is no
opportunity for
them to manifest themselves. Allowing some of the errors
to correlate
may give the more comprehensive model a better fit
but I note that this
is a simplistic explanation because there
is so much more that needs to be
known about the data and your analysis
before a more credible answer
can be given.
If this is a SEM question, you might want to try the asking
the SEMNET
list as well.
-Mike Palij
New York University
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Administrator
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In reply to this post by E. Bernardo
As Mike stated.
You are in no way accounting for any structural relations between Y and Z. Probably need to review your SEM and other things. David ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD
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