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Methods for Adaptive Shrinkage, using Empirical Bayes
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publication date: 17 October 2019
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publication date: 21 August 2023
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The R package 'ashr' implements an Empirical Bayes approach for large-scale hypothesis testing and false discovery rate (FDR) estimation based on the methods proposed in M. Stephens, 2016, "False discovery rates: a new deal", <doi:10.1093/biostatistics/kxw041>. These methods can be applied whenever two sets of summary statistics—estimated effects and standard errors—are available, just as 'qvalue' can be applied to previously computed p-values. Two main interfaces are provided: ash(), which is more user-friendly; and ash.workhorse(), which has more options and is geared toward advanced users. The ash() and ash.workhorse() also provides a flexible modeling interface that can accommodate a variety of likelihoods (e.g., normal, Poisson) and mixture priors (e.g., uniform, normal).
Property / description: The R package 'ashr' implements an Empirical Bayes approach for large-scale hypothesis testing and false discovery rate (FDR) estimation based on the methods proposed in M. Stephens, 2016, "False discovery rates: a new deal", <doi:10.1093/biostatistics/kxw041>. These methods can be applied whenever two sets of summary statistics—estimated effects and standard errors—are available, just as 'qvalue' can be applied to previously computed p-values. Two main interfaces are provided: ash(), which is more user-friendly; and ash.workhorse(), which has more options and is geared toward advanced users. The ash() and ash.workhorse() also provides a flexible modeling interface that can accommodate a variety of likelihoods (e.g., normal, Poisson) and mixture priors (e.g., uniform, normal). / rank
 
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Property / author: David Gerard / rank
 
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Property / author: Mengyin Lu / rank
 
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Property / author: Lei Sun / rank
 
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Property / author: Jason Willwerscheid / rank
 
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Property / author: Nan Xiao / rank
 
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edition/version: ≥ 3 (English)
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point in time: 30 August 2023
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Latest revision as of 00:11, 22 March 2024

Methods for Adaptive Shrinkage, using Empirical Bayes
Language Label Description Also known as
English
ashr
Methods for Adaptive Shrinkage, using Empirical Bayes

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    2.2-54
    22 February 2022
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    2.0.5
    27 December 2016
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    2.2-7
    1 March 2018
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    2.2-32
    22 February 2019
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    2.2-39
    17 October 2019
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    2.2-40
    3 February 2020
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    2.2-47
    20 February 2020
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    2.2-63
    21 August 2023
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    21 August 2023
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    The R package 'ashr' implements an Empirical Bayes approach for large-scale hypothesis testing and false discovery rate (FDR) estimation based on the methods proposed in M. Stephens, 2016, "False discovery rates: a new deal", <doi:10.1093/biostatistics/kxw041>. These methods can be applied whenever two sets of summary statistics—estimated effects and standard errors—are available, just as 'qvalue' can be applied to previously computed p-values. Two main interfaces are provided: ash(), which is more user-friendly; and ash.workhorse(), which has more options and is geared toward advanced users. The ash() and ash.workhorse() also provides a flexible modeling interface that can accommodate a variety of likelihoods (e.g., normal, Poisson) and mixture priors (e.g., uniform, normal).
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