Confounding, homogeneity and collapsibility for causal effects in epidemiologic studies.
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Publication:2714945
zbMATH Open1057.62536MaRDI QIDQ2714945FDOQ2714945
Authors: Zhi Geng, Jianhua Guo, Tai Shing Lau, Wing K. Fung
Publication date: 2001
Published in: Statistica Sinica (Search for Journal in Brave)
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Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Epidemiology (92D30)
Cited In (10)
- Relations among homogeneity, collapsibility and nonconfounding in distribution effects
- Adjustments and their consequences -- Collapsibility analysis using graphical models
- Confounding and collapsibility in causal inference
- Criteria for Confounders in Epidemiological Studies
- On the definition of a confounder
- Conditions for uniformly non-confounding of causal distribution effects over multiple covariates
- Confounding in Epidemiologic Studies: The Adequacy of the Control Group as a Measure of Confounding
- Detecting multiple confounders
- On collapsibilities of Yule's measure
- Confounding and effect modification: distribution and measure
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