<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><!DOCTYPE article  PUBLIC '-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN'  'http://www.docbook.org/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd'><article><articleinfo><title>FAQ/cookdmore</title><revhistory><revision><revnumber>8</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:38:07</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>7</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:37:53</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>6</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:37:34</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>5</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:37:22</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>4</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:37:08</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>3</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:36:54</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>2</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:34:46</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision><revision><revnumber>1</revnumber><date>2016-01-19 10:33:46</date><authorinitials>PeterWatson</authorinitials></revision></revhistory></articleinfo><section><title>Thresholds for Cook's Distance</title><para>In addition to a cut-off of 1, Hair et al mention that some people also use 4/(N-k-1) as a threshold for Cook’s distance which gives a lower threshold than 1 (e.g. this is 4/(27-1-1) = 0.16 for k predictors and N points with k=1 predictor and N=27 points). A third threshold of 4/N is also mentioned as a threshold in </para><para>Bollen, Kenneth A.; and Jackman, Robert W. (1990) Regression diagnostics: An expository treatment of outliers and influential cases,  </para><para>and also in  </para><para>Fox, John and Long, J. Scott (eds.); Modern Methods of Data Analysis (pp. 257-91). Newbury Park, CA: Sage  </para><para>which gives 4/27 = 0.14 in the above example.  </para></section></article>