Regression Methods in Biostatistics (e-bog) af McCulloch, Charles E.
McCulloch, Charles E. (forfatter)

Regression Methods in Biostatistics e-bog

802,25 DKK (inkl. moms 1002,81 DKK)
Theprimarybiostatisticaltoolsinmodernmedicalresearcharesingle-outcome, multiple-predictor methods: multiple linear regression for continuous o- comes, logistic regression for binary outcomes, and the Cox proportional h- ardsmodelfortime-to-eventoutcomes. Morerecently,generalizedlinearm- els and regression methods for repeated outcomes have come into widespread use in the medical research litera...
E-bog 802,25 DKK
Forfattere McCulloch, Charles E. (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 30 marts 2006
Genrer Public health and preventive medicine
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780387272559
Theprimarybiostatisticaltoolsinmodernmedicalresearcharesingle-outcome, multiple-predictor methods: multiple linear regression for continuous o- comes, logistic regression for binary outcomes, and the Cox proportional h- ardsmodelfortime-to-eventoutcomes. Morerecently,generalizedlinearm- els and regression methods for repeated outcomes have come into widespread use in the medical research literature. Applying these methods and interpr- ing the results requires some introduction. However, introductory statistics courses have no time to spend on such topics and hence they are often r- egated to a third or fourth course in a sequence. Books tend to have either very brief coverage or to be treatments of a single topic and more theoretical than the typical researcher wants or needs. Our goal in writing this book was to provide an accessible introduction to multipredictor methods, emphasizing their proper use and interpretation. We feel strongly that this can only be accomplished by illustrating the te- niques using a variety of real datasets. We have incorporated as little theory as feasible. Further, we have tried to keep the book relatively short and to the point. Our hope in doing so is that the important issues and similarities between the methods, rather than their di?erences, will come through. We hope this book will be attractive to medical researchers needing familiarity with these methods and to students studying statistics who would like to see them applied to real data.