4.6 Article

Maximum Likelihood, Profile Likelihood, and Penalized Likelihood: A Primer

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 179, Issue 2, Pages 252-260

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwt245

Keywords

epidemiologic methods; maximum likelihood; modeling; penalized estimation; regression; statistics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AI100654, R21AI103012]

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The method of maximum likelihood is widely used in epidemiology, yet many epidemiologists receive little or no education in the conceptual underpinnings of the approach. Here we provide a primer on maximum likelihood and some important extensions which have proven useful in epidemiologic research, and which reveal connections between maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods. For a given data set and probability model, maximum likelihood finds values of the model parameters that give the observed data the highest probability. As with all inferential statistical methods, maximum likelihood is based on an assumed model and cannot account for bias sources that are not controlled by the model or the study design. Maximum likelihood is nonetheless popular, because it is computationally straightforward and intuitive and because maximum likelihood estimators have desirable large-sample properties in the (largely fictitious) case in which the model has been correctly specified. Here, we work through an example to illustrate the mechanics of maximum likelihood estimation and indicate how improvements can be made easily with commercial software. We then describe recent extensions and generalizations which are better suited to observational health research and which should arguably replace standard maximum likelihood as the default method.

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