Did you check out the CATREG and CATPCA procedures in the SPSS CATEGORIES. The people at Leiden designed it. I haven't had a chance to try it myself, but have heard noting but positive things about it. *IFF* I understand correctly, you can have it test differences for fit using nominal, ordinal, and interval assumptions. Art Kendall Social Research Consultants Peter Flom wrote: > > I would be interested in any references anyone can supply on ordinal > trees, either alone or in combination with ordinal logistic regression. > > Here is a brief outline of what I am trying to do: > We have a DV that is ordinal - level of dementia in the elderly. In > our data set, it has six levels, with more people in the middle levels > than the extreme ones. Total N is about 1,000. We have a great many > potential IVs (almost 2000) but many of these are highly correlated, > and some are more likely to be related to the DV than others. I've > done a lot of data reduction, getting it down to about 100 IVs. > > The problem is that the relationship between the DV and the IVs is > different at different levels of the DV. For instance, some IVs are > similar at DV = 1, 2, or 3 but then jump and are similar at 4,5, or > 6. Others show different patterns. > > I've tried a few different things. One that seems to show promise is > first doing a tree of 1,2,3 vs. 4,5,6 then doing trees among 1,2,3 and > 4,5,6 separately. But this is problematic because the first tree, > while it works fairly well, does not work nearly perfectly. > > I am using CART for the tree analysis, and have SAS and R for other > statistical analyses. > > So, before I reinvent the wheel, I wanted to ask if anyone has seen > something like this before. > > Thanks in advance > > Peter > > Peter L. Flom, PhD > Brainscope, Inc. > 212 263 7863 (MTW) > 212 845 4485 (Th) > 917 488 7176 (F) > > > ---------------------------------------------- CLASS-L list. > Instructions: > http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l ---------------------------------------------- CLASS-L list. Instructions: http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l