All material posted here is subject to common sense copyright ;). That is, I'd appreciate if you cite if something is useful, and if you ask me before using materials in your classes (fjaeger@bcs.rochester.edu). This will also help to reduce damage whenever I (or someone else) discovers mistakes in any of the material. Feedback welcome. Thanks. Whenever I incorporated materials from others, this is mentioned in the slides.

training grant, Digging into Data (SSHRC/NSF), and BRAMS. My own lectures were updated versions of the tutorial at Penn State: [attachment:lecture1McGill.pdf Lecture 1 "Introduction to Generalized Linear and Generalized Linear Mixed Models"] and [attachment:lecture2McGill.pdf Lecture 2 "Common issues and solutions in regression analyses"]. In addition, Maureen Gillespie lead a [attachment:gillespie-tutorial.pdf hands-on tutorial on Implementing Hypotheses: Coding], along with a [attachment:gillespie-script.R R script] using a [attachment:fakedata.txt fake data set]. Peter Graff gave a [attachment:graff-tutorial.pdf tutorial on model comparison "Comparing linguistic theories using logistic regression"], also along with [attachment:graff-script.R R script] and the [attachment:PluralComparisonMontreal.csv linguistic data data set described in the slides].

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