4.4 Article

How Many Imputations Do You Need? A Two-stage Calculation Using a Quadratic Rule

Journal

SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS & RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 699-718

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0049124117747303

Keywords

missing data; missing values; incomplete data; multiple imputation; imputation

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When using multiple imputation, users often want to know how many imputations they need. An old answer is that 2-10 imputations usually suffice, but this recommendation only addresses the efficiency of point estimates. You may need more imputations if, in addition to efficient point estimates, you also want standard error (SE) estimates that would not change (much) if you imputed the data again. For replicableSEestimates, the required number of imputations increases quadratically with the fraction of missing information (not linearly, as previous studies have suggested). I recommend a two-stage procedure in which you conduct a pilot analysis using a small-to-moderate number of imputations, then use the results to calculate the number of imputations that are needed for a final analysis whoseSEestimates will have the desired level of replicability. I implement the two-stage procedure using a new SAS macro called%mi_combineand a new Stata command called how_many_imputations.

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