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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

A Comparison Of Semi-Parametric And Nonparametric Methods For Estimating Mean Time To Event For Randomly Left Censored Data, Farzana Chowdhury, Jahida Gulshan, Syed Shahadat Hossain May 2015

A Comparison Of Semi-Parametric And Nonparametric Methods For Estimating Mean Time To Event For Randomly Left Censored Data, Farzana Chowdhury, Jahida Gulshan, Syed Shahadat Hossain

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

The aim of this study was to make a comparison among existing estimation methods (Kaplan-Meier, Nelson-Aalen and Regression on Ordered Statistics (ROS)) for randomly left censored time to event data under selected distributions and for different level of censoring and sample sizes in order to determine the strength of these methods based on simulated data. Comparisons among the methods are made on the basis of unbiasedness and Monte Carlo Standard Error of the summary statistics (mean time to event) obtained by those methods under different conditions.


Assessing Agreement Between Two Measurement Systems: An Alternative To The Limits Of Agreement Approach, Nathaniel Stevens, S H. Steiner, R J. Mackay Jan 2015

Assessing Agreement Between Two Measurement Systems: An Alternative To The Limits Of Agreement Approach, Nathaniel Stevens, S H. Steiner, R J. Mackay

Mathematics

The comparison of two measurement systems is important in medical and other contexts. A common goal is to decide if a new measurement system agrees suitably with an existing one, and hence whether the two can be used interchangeably. Various methods for assessing interchangeability are available, the most popular being the limits of agreement approach due to Bland and Altman. In this article, we review the challenges of this technique and propose a model-based framework for comparing measurement systems that overcomes those challenges. The proposal is based on a simple metric, the probability of agreement, and a corresponding plot which …


The Number Of Subjects Per Variable Required In Linear Regression Analyses, Peter Austin, Ewout Steyerberg Jan 2015

The Number Of Subjects Per Variable Required In Linear Regression Analyses, Peter Austin, Ewout Steyerberg

Peter Austin

Objectives: To determine the number of independent variables that can be included in a linear regression model.

Study Design and Setting: We used a series of Monte Carlo simulations to examine the impact of the number of subjects per variable (SPV) on the accuracy of estimated regression coefficients and standard errors, on the empirical coverage of estimated confidence intervals, and on the accuracy of the estimated R2 of the fitted model.

Results: A minimum of approximately two SPV tended to result in estimation of regression coefficients with relative bias of less than 10%. Furthermore, with this minimum number of SPV, …


Optimal Full Matching For Survival Outcomes: A Method That Merits More Widespread Use, Peter Austin, Elizabeth Stuart Dec 2014

Optimal Full Matching For Survival Outcomes: A Method That Merits More Widespread Use, Peter Austin, Elizabeth Stuart

Peter Austin

Matching on the propensity score is a commonly used analytic method for estimating the effects of treatments on outcomes. Commonly used propensity score matching methods include nearest neighbor matching and nearest neighbor caliper matching. Rosenbaum (1991) proposed an optimal full matching approach, in which matched strata are formed consisting of either one treated subject and at least one control subject or one control subject and at least one treated subject. Full matching has been used rarely in the applied literature. Furthermore, its performance for use with survival outcomes has not been rigorously evaluated. We propose a method to use full …