In many cases, the differences between the LS and MLE results are minor, and the methods can be used interchangeably. You may want to run both methods and see whether the results confirm one another. If the results differ, you may want to determine why. Otherwise, you may want to use the more conservative estimates or consider the advantages of both approaches and make a choice for your problem.
LSE | MLE | |
---|---|---|
Biased | No | Yes for small samples, but decreases as sample size increases |
Estimate variance | Larger | Smaller |
P-values | More precise | Less precise |
Coefficients | Less precise | More precise |
Censored data | Less reliable and unusable in extreme cases | More reliable even in extreme cases |
Based on their relative strengths, LSE and MLE can be used together for different parts of the analysis. Use LSE's more precise p-values to select the terms to include in the model and use MLE to estimate the final coefficients.