LandermanLawrence R.MustilloSarah A.LandKenneth C. 2011. “Modeling Repeated Measures of Dichotomous Data: Testing Whether the Within-Person Trajectory of Change Varies across Levels of Between-Person Factors.” Social Science Research40(5):1456–64.
4.
LittleRoderick J. A.RubinDonald B. 2014. Statistical Analysis with Missing Data. New York: Wiley.
MoodCarina. 2010. “Logistic Regression: Why We Cannot Do What We Think We Can Do, and What We Can Do About It.” European Sociological Review26(1):67–82.
7.
MunschChristin L.2012. “The Science of Two-Timing: The State of Infidelity Research.” Sociology Compass6(1):46–59.
8.
PorterJeremy R.Howard EcklundElaine. 2012. “Missing Data in Sociological Research: An Overview of Recent Trends and an Illustration for Controversial Questions, Active Nonrespondents and Targeted Samples.” The American Sociologist43(4):448–68.
9.
WhismanMark A.SnyderDouglas K. 2007. “Sexual Infidelity in a National Survey of American Women: Differences in Prevalence and Correlates as a Function of Method of Assessment.” Journal of Family Psychology21(2):147–54.
10.
WilliamsRichard. 2009. “Using Heterogeneous Choice Models to Compare Logit and Probit Coefficients across Groups.” Sociological Methods & Research37(4):531–59.