Maximum likelihood inference for multivariate frailty models using an automated Monte Carlo EM algorithm
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1423306
DOI10.1023/A:1020566821163zbMath1116.62407WikidataQ52026754 ScholiaQ52026754MaRDI QIDQ1423306
Klaus Larsen, Juni Palmgren, Samuli Ripatti
Publication date: 14 February 2004
Published in: Lifetime Data Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1020566821163
62H12: Estimation in multivariate analysis
65C05: Monte Carlo methods
62N02: Estimation in survival analysis and censored data
Related Items
A fast Monte Carlo expectation–maximization algorithm for estimation in latent class model analysis with an application to assess diagnostic accuracy for cervical neoplasia in women with atypical glandular cells, Detecting influential data in multivariate survival models, A novel outlier statistic in multivariate survival models and its application to identify unusual under-five mortality sub-districts in Malawi, On proportional hazards assumption under the random effects models, On a convergent stochastic estimation algorithm for frailty models, Faster Monte Carlo estimation of joint models for time-to-event and multivariate longitudinal data, Validation of prognostic indices using the frailty model, Comparison of different estimation procedures for proportional hazards model with random effects, Stacked Laplace-EM algorithm for duration models with time-varying and random effects, Multivariate frailty models for multi-type recurrent event data and its application to cancer prevention trial, Semiparametric regression analysis of clustered survival data with semi-competing risks, Matrix-variate Lindley distributions and its applications, GPU accelerated estimation of a shared random effect joint model for dynamic prediction, Regression analysis of interval-censored failure time data with time-dependent covariates, A comparison of different bivariate correlated frailty models and estimation strategies, Selecting Factors Predictive of Heterogeneity in Multivariate Event Time Data