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Wiley InterScience | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() BiometricsVolume 58 Issue 4, Pages 742 - 753 Published Online: 21 May 2004 ©2009 International Biometric Society Journal of the International Biometric Society
Abstract | References | Full Text: PDF (Size: 1285K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking A Semiparametric Likelihood Approach to Joint Modeling of Longitudinal and Time-to-Event Data Copyright The International Biometric Society, 2002 KEYWORDS Informative censoring • Mixed model • Proportional hazards • SNP density • Survival Summary.
Summary. Joint models for a time-to-event (e.g., survival) and a longitudinal response have generated considerable recent interest. The longitudinal data are assumed to follow a mixed effects model, and a proportional hazards model depending on the longitudinal random effects and other covariates is assumed for the survival endpoint. Interest may focus on inference on the longitudinal data process, which is informatively censored, or on the hazard relationship. Several methods for fitting such models have been proposed, most requiring a parametric distributional assumption (normality) on the random effects. A natural concern is sensitivity to violation of this assumption; moreover, a restrictive distributional assumption may obscure key features in the data. We investigate these issues through our proposal of a likelihood-based approach that requires only the assumption that the random effects have a smooth density. Implementation via the EM algorithm is described, and performance and the benefits for uncovering noteworthy features are illustrated by application to data from an HIV clinical trial and by simulation. Received May2002. Revised May 2002. Accepted May 2002. |
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2009 Harold W. Kuhn Award |
Congratulations to Gerald G. Brown and W. Matthew Carlyle, recipients of the 2009 Harold W. Kuhn Award for their exceptional paper published in Naval Research Logistics "
Optimizing the US Navy's combat logistics force
" Read the full article FREE online PDF [320k] | |
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Teaching Statistics |
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