A Potential for Bias When Rounding in Multiple Imputation

From MaRDI portal
Publication:5189921

DOI10.1198/0003130032314zbMath1182.62002OpenAlexW2000521158WikidataQ58244287 ScholiaQ58244287MaRDI QIDQ5189921

Nicholas J. Horton, Michael Parzen, Stuart R. Lipsitz

Publication date: 11 March 2010

Published in: The American Statistician (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1198/0003130032314




Related Items (18)

Bias Introduced by Rounding in Multiple Imputation for Ordered Categorical VariablesDiscreteness Causes Bias in Percentage-Based Comparisons: A Case Study From Educational TestingGeneral-purpose imputation of planned missing data in social surveys: different strategies and their effect on correlationsConfidence Intervals for the Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve in the Presence of Ignorable Missing DataA distance-based rounding strategy for post-imputation ordinal dataNavigating choices when applying multiple imputation in the presence of multi-level categorical interaction effectsPrediction and Inference With Missing Data in Patient Alert SystemsA simulation framework for correlated count data of features subsets in high-throughput sequencing or proteomics experimentsCorrection of Bias in Imputing Missing Values of Categorical VariablesLatent class based multiple imputation approach for missing categorical dataRandom covariances and mixed-effects models for imputing multivariate multilevel continuous dataMultiple imputation: a review of practical and theoretical findingsStrategies for handling missing data in longitudinal studies with questionnairesQuantifying the impact of fixed effects modeling of clusters in multiple imputation for cluster randomized trialsRounding non-binary categorical variables following multivariate normal imputation: evaluation of simple methods and implications for practiceUsing multiple imputation with GEE with non-monotone missing longitudinal binary outcomesA Simulation Study Comparing Multiple Imputation Methods for Incomplete Longitudinal Ordinal DataMultiple imputation of discrete and continuous data by fully conditional specification


Uses Software






This page was built for publication: A Potential for Bias When Rounding in Multiple Imputation