Semiparametric sieve maximum likelihood estimation for accelerated hazards model with interval-censored data
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2301055
DOI10.1016/j.jspi.2019.07.002zbMath1437.62622MaRDI QIDQ2301055
Xiaoyu Liu, Liming Xiang, Zsolt Szabó
Publication date: 28 February 2020
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspi.2019.07.002
62G20: Asymptotic properties of nonparametric inference
62P10: Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis
62N01: Censored data models
62N02: Estimation in survival analysis and censored data
Related Items
Link-based survival additive models under mixed censoring to assess risks of hospital-acquired infections, Generalized accelerated hazards mixture cure models with interval-censored data
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Convergence rate of sieve estimates
- Partially linear transformation cure models for interval-censored data
- Weak convergence and empirical processes. With applications to statistics
- Induced smoothing for the semiparametric accelerated hazards model
- Efficient estimation for semiparametric cure models with interval-censored data
- The statistical analysis of interval-censored failure time data.
- A New Semiparametric Estimation Method for Accelerated Hazard Model
- A Spline-Based Semiparametric Maximum Likelihood Estimation Method for the Cox Model with Interval-Censored Data
- Accelerated Hazards Regression Model and Its Adequacy for Censored Survival Data
- Sieve maximum likelihood regression analysis of dependent current status data
- “Smooth” Semiparametric Regression Analysis for Arbitrarily Censored Time-to-Event Data
- Interval censoring: identifiability and the constant-sum property
- Asymptotic Statistics
- Hazard Function Estimation Using B-Splines
- Sieve Estimation for the Proportional-Odds Failure-Time Regression Model With Interval Censoring
- Analysis of Accelerated Hazards Models
- Interval censoring: Model characterizations for the validity of the simplified likelihood
- Accelerated hazards model based on parametric families generalized with Bernstein polynomials
- Estimation of the mean function with panel count data using monotone polynomial splines
- Data Envelope Fitting with Constrained Polynomial Splines