archived_user
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- Jun 18, 2026
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Can someone explain more about cases of regression that are not based on a time series? It seems to me that all regression is time series based.
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This is not accurate as there are more than plenty of instances some kind of regression is used on cross-sectional/non time series data.Atomic_Sheep wrote:
To address your question about whether regression analysis only works with time series data, then I think the answer is yes.
Maybe I’m not understanding you, but cross-sectional data are not time series data. A time series is a temporally ordered set of measurements of some variable Xit such that variable Xi measured at time=t inherently precedes the measurement of Xi at time t+1. Cross-sectional data are inherently at a single, defined time such that there is no way to order temporally the measurements of Xi .Atomic_Sheep wrote:
I think I made a mistake with my definitions. I was trying to say that cross sectional data, being at a point in time is time series data just that the point in time at which the data was taken makes it time-series, but I think your definition is better.
Is the bold text part of your misunderstanding? Because cross-sectional data are not a type of time series because you’ve removed any chance at a temporal ordering. I am unsure if you’re now stating that as a correct remark or that was your misunderstanding.Atomic_Sheep wrote:
Yes, you understood my misunderstanding perfectly. I was calling cross sectional data as time series data even though it’s not. I just said since it happens at a single point in time, that it’s a type of time series data.