Goodness-of-Fit Testing for Exponential Polynomial Growth Curves
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3622052
DOI10.1080/03610920802209135zbMath1159.62011OpenAlexW2136822095MaRDI QIDQ3622052
Sabyasachi Bhattacharya, Ayanendranath Basu, Subhadip Bandyopadhyay
Publication date: 23 April 2009
Published in: Communications in Statistics - Theory and Methods (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/03610920802209135
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Parametric hypothesis testing (62F03) Asymptotic properties of parametric tests (62F05)
Related Items
On comparison of relative growth rates under different environmental conditions with application to biological data ⋮ Evolution of model specific relative growth rate: its genesis and performance over Fisher's growth rates ⋮ Goodness-of-fit testing in growth curve models: a general approach based on finite differences ⋮ A novel unification method to characterize a broad class of growth curve models using relative growth rate ⋮ Goodness-of-fit testing for the Gompertz growth curve model ⋮ Unnamed Item
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Random-Effects Models for Longitudinal Data
- Estimating the autocorrelated error model with trended data
- Estimating the dimension of a model
- An \(R\)-squared measure of goodness of fit for some common nonlinear regression models
- Prediction of future observations in growth curve models. With discussion and a reply by the author
- Analysis of logistic growth models
- Goodness-of-fit testing in growth curve models: a general approach based on finite differences
- A Class of Linear Spectral Models and Analyses for the Study of Longitudinal data
- Goodness-of-Fit Methods for Generalized Linear Mixed Models
- SOME PROBLEMS INVOLVING LINEAR HYPOTHESES IN MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS
- Goodness-of-Fit in Generalized Nonlinear Mixed-Effects Models
- A Weighted Concordance Correlation Coefficient for Repeated Measurement Designs
- Approximate Inference in Generalized Linear Mixed Models
- On the ratio of two correlated normal random variables
- A new look at the statistical model identification