When Should Epidemiologic Regressions Use Random Coefficients?
DOI10.1111/J.0006-341X.2000.00915.XzbMATH Open1060.62618OpenAlexW2106716774WikidataQ44736856 ScholiaQ44736856MaRDI QIDQ4670441FDOQ4670441
Authors: Sander Greenland
Publication date: 22 April 2005
Published in: Biometrics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0006-341x.2000.00915.x
Recommendations
causal inferencemixed modelsshrinkageBayesian statisticsrelative riskrisk assessmentvariance componentsmultilevel modelempirical Bayes estimatorsepidemiologic methodshierarchical regressionrandom-coefficient regression
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Analysis of variance and covariance (ANOVA) (62J10) Empirical decision procedures; empirical Bayes procedures (62C12)
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Cited In (12)
- A two-stage hierarchical regression model for meta-analysis of epidemiologic nonlinear dose-response data
- The Performance of Random Coefficient Regression in Accounting for Residual Confounding
- Tests for qualitative features in the random coefficients model
- A case study in hierarchical modeling: Agriculture and prostate cancer in Iowa
- Discussion of: ``Akaike Memorial Lecture 2020: Some of the challenges of statistical applications
- A nondegenerate penalized likelihood estimator for variance parameters in multilevel models
- Subject-specific odds ratios in binomial GLMMs with continuous response
- Putting background information about relative risks into conjugate prior distributions
- Comment: The need for syncretism in applied statistics
- Relaxation penalties and priors for plausible modeling of nonidentified bias sources
- Selection of terms in random coefficient regression models
- Generalized conjugate priors for Bayesian analysis of risk and survival regressions
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