Nonparametric predictive inference for diagnostic accuracy
From MaRDI portal
Publication:413366
DOI10.1016/j.jspi.2011.11.015zbMath1236.62039OpenAlexW2087823571MaRDI QIDQ413366
Frank P. A. Coolen, Pauline Coolen-Schrijner, Tahani Coolen-Maturi
Publication date: 4 May 2012
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.2011.11.015
partial area under the ROC curvepAUCarea under the ROC curve (AUC)lower and upper probabilityNPIreceiver operating characteristic (ROC)
Related Items
Three-group ROC analysis: a nonparametric predictive approach ⋮ Nonparametric predictive inference for comparison of two diagnostic tests ⋮ Nonparametric predictive inference for diagnostic test thresholds ⋮ Nonparametric predictive inference for binary diagnostic tests ⋮ Nonparametric predictive inference for accuracy of ordinal diagnostic tests ⋮ Nonparametric predictive comparison of two diagnostic tests based on total numbers of correctly diagnosed individuals ⋮ Predictive inference for bivariate data: combining nonparametric predictive inference for marginals with an estimated copula
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On nonparametric predictive inference and objective Bayesianism
- Comparing two populations based on low stochastic structure assumptions
- Low structure imprecise predictive inference for Bayes' problem
- Nonparametric predictive inference and interval probability
- Nonparametric predictive inference with right-censored data
- Partial AUC Estimation and Regression
- Comparing the Areas under Two or More Correlated Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves: A Nonparametric Approach
- Frequentist prediction intervals and predictive distributions
- ROC Curves for Continuous Data
- A distribution-free procedure for comparing receiver operating characteristic curves for a paired experiment
- A Permutation Test to Compare Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves
- Posterior Distribution of Percentiles: Bayes' Theorem for Sampling from a Population