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Full-Text Articles in Statistical Models
Using Regression Models To Analyze Randomized Trials: Asymptotically Valid Hypothesis Tests Despite Incorrectly Specified Models, Michael Rosenblum, Mark J. Van Der Laan
Using Regression Models To Analyze Randomized Trials: Asymptotically Valid Hypothesis Tests Despite Incorrectly Specified Models, Michael Rosenblum, Mark J. Van Der Laan
U.C. Berkeley Division of Biostatistics Working Paper Series
Regression models are often used to test for cause-effect relationships from data collected in randomized trials or experiments. This practice has deservedly come under heavy scrutiny, since commonly used models such as linear and logistic regression will often not capture the actual relationships between variables, and incorrectly specified models potentially lead to incorrect conclusions. In this paper, we focus on hypothesis test of whether the treatment given in a randomized trial has any effect on the mean of the primary outcome, within strata of baseline variables such as age, sex, and health status. Our primary concern is ensuring that such …
Locally Efficient Estimation Of Regression Parameters Using Current Status Data, Chris Andrews, Mark J. Van Der Laan, James M. Robins
Locally Efficient Estimation Of Regression Parameters Using Current Status Data, Chris Andrews, Mark J. Van Der Laan, James M. Robins
U.C. Berkeley Division of Biostatistics Working Paper Series
In biostatistics applications interest often focuses on the estimation of the distribution of a time-variable T. If one only observes whether or not T exceeds an observed monitoring time C, then the data structure is called current status data, also known as interval censored data, case I. We consider this data structure extended to allow the presence of both time-independent covariates and time-dependent covariate processes that are observed until the monitoring time. We assume that the monitoring process satisfies coarsening at random.
Our goal is to estimate the regression parameter beta of the regression model T = Z*beta+epsilon where the …