¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Regressors
1. regressor [n] - See also: regressor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Regressors
Literary usage of Regressors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Selected Proceedings of the Symposium on Estimating Functions by Ishwar V. Basawa, V. P. Godambe, Robert Lee Taylor (1997)
"Institute of Mathematical Statistics LECTURE NOTES — MONOGRAPH SERIES OPTIMAL
INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLE ESTIMATION FOR LINEAR MODELS WITH STOCHASTIC Regressors ..."
2. Sas/stat 9.1 User's Guide by SAS Institute, Virginia Clark (2004)
"Another possibility is to scale the regressors in terms of the cost of ...
Correlated Regressors In an experiment, you can often select values for the ..."
3. Time Series and Related Topics by Ching-Zong Wei, Hwai-Chung Ho, Ching-Kang Ing, Tze Leung Lai (2006)
"... models with nonstationary regressors. It is shown that the term of order 1/n
in FPE and the term of order logn in APE share the same constant, ..."
4. SAS/ETS(R) 9.1 User's Guide, Volumes 1, 2, 3, and 4 by SAS Institute (2004)
"Regressors Selection Window Use the Regressors Selection window to select one or
more time series variables in the input data set to include as regressors ..."
5. Strengthening Policy Analysis: Econometric Tests Using Microcomputer Software by Lawrence James Haddad, Daniel Driscoll (1995)
"Multicollinearity exists in virtually every data set but is a problem only when
the linear relationship among regressors is very strong. ..."
6. The Well-Being of Video Display Terminal Users: An Exploratory Study by Mark S Gottlieb, Steven L Sauter, Vernon M Dodson, Kathryn M Rohrer (1999)
"This is a measure of the "leverage" or influence of each observation (ie associated
regressors for each case) on the predicted values produced by the model. ..."
7. Change-Point Problems by Edward G. Carlstein, Hans-Georg Müller, David Siegmund (1994)
"... but from the smaller to the larger values of the regressor (or more generally,
according to the vector of regressors lying on one side or the other of a ..."