Recursive Combination Tests

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4468380


DOI10.1198/016214502753479374zbMath1073.62550WikidataQ57305829 ScholiaQ57305829MaRDI QIDQ4468380

Martin Posch, Peter Bauer, Werner Brannath

Publication date: 10 June 2004

Published in: Journal of the American Statistical Association (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1198/016214502753479374


62L05: Sequential statistical design


Related Items

Data-Driven Analysis Strategies for Proportion Studies in Adaptive Group Sequential Test Designs, Probabilistic Foundation of Confirmatory Adaptive Designs, Effect Modification and Design Sensitivity in Observational Studies, Confidence intervals for confirmatory adaptive two‐stage designs with treatment selection, Multiple Testing in a Two-Stage Adaptive Design With Combination Tests Controlling FDR, p-Value calculation for multi-stage additive tests, Monitoring Continuous Long-Term Outcomes in Adaptive Designs, Adaptive group sequential confidence intervals for the ratio of normal means, Adaptive designs with arbitrary dependence structure based on Fisher's combination test, Adaptive confidence intervals of desired length and power for normal means, Basic concepts of group sequential and adaptive group sequential test procedures, On design and inference for two-stage adaptive clinical trials with dependent data, Unnamed Item, Unnamed Item, Adaptive designs with arbitrary dependence structure, Maximum type 1 error rate inflation in multiarmed clinical trials with adaptive interim sample size modifications, Sequential Methods in Multi-Arm Clinical Trials, Likelihood inference for a two-stage design with treatment selection, Sequential Tests for Noninferiority and Superiority, Statistical Inference in Adaptive Group Sequential Trials with the Standardized Mean Difference as Effect Size, An Approach to the Conditional Error Rate Principle with Nuisance Parameters, Are Flexible Designs Sound?, A Two-Stage Procedure for Comparing Hazard Rate Functions, Exact Confidence Bounds Following Adaptive Group Sequential Tests